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Avoiding holes in your VoIP

Avoiding holes in your VoIP

By:  Mark Els  On: 10 Nov 2005 For: Network World Canada Creator

Ottawa-based startup VoIPshield Systems Inc. is marking time on the release of protection products for voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) applications, but last month released VoIP-specific auditing software as its first product.

Ottawa-based startup VoIPshield Systems Inc. is marking time on the release of protection products for voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) applications, but last month released VoIP-specific auditing software as its first product.

The company says the full scope of VoIP threats is still unpredictable and instead is offering VoIPaudit, a discovery and assessment tool that scans the network for VoIP vulnerabilities, then compiles a report and lists recommendations to address known issues.

“Based on our discussions with enterprises, vendors and service providers, this is the first tool they are looking for, because today, no one really knows whether VoIP is fully secure, what the issues are and how to address those issues,” said Bogdan Materna, chief technology officer and vice-president of engineering for VoIPshield.

Alicia Wanless, an analyst at Seaboard Group in Toronto, says although VoIP is in its early stages, the most pressing issue is regulatory compliance. And a product such as VoIPaudit directly addresses these concerns, she says.

“It’s important that VoIP as a new technology is monitored in more of a preventative manner than reactionary, but it would appear the VoIPaudit product is a response to the regulations. There’s a certain amount of auditing necessary and that’s what VoIPshield is offering,” said Wanless.

“Sarbanes-Oxley, Bill 198 in Canada, as well as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) enforce that enterprises must have auditing tools in place that will produce reports in real-time for their communication systems. That includes authorization for who has access to information, and that touches voice over IP because of the security issues involved with VoIP.”

The automated auditing tool scans the VoIP hardware and software, and related components such as routers, firewalls and the underlying operating system, supporting applications, directory servers and protocols, such as domain name service (DNS) and dynamic host configuration protocol (DHCP).

VoIPaudit also provides multi-vendor support for VoIP protocols, including SIP, H323, Cisco Skinny, Nortel Unistim and other proprietary protocols.

Vulnerabilities such as virus and denial of service (DoS) attacks, toll fraud, information privacy, buffer overflow attacks and voice spam need to be assessed, says Materna, before the deployment of VoIP over the infrastructure.

“We approach security in three domains,” he said. “Prevention deals with finding vulnerabilities and patching them before deploying VoIP, while protection is where we build defence mechanisms for the VoIP infrastructure, such as firewalls, intrusion protection systems, anti-virus software, session border controllers and encryption.

“But no matter what you do in those two domains, sooner or later something will still get through. The domain we have to begin with is mitigation,” said Materna. “That way, the VoIP network can still be up and running, even if it’s at a lower quality level, and you have enough time to address the issues.”


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Mark Els Mark Els is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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