Skype encryption too tough for German police

VoIP provider Skype's encryption creates serious problems for law enforcement, according to the president of Germany's Federal Police Office (BKA) Jörg Ziercke.

BKA experts can not decipher telephone conversations relayed by the popular VoIP service said Ziercke, meaning that they have to intercept the conversations at the source, before they are encrypted, or at the receiver, after they are decrypted.

Because of these encrypted communications, European authorities have been lobbying for legal online searches of computer hard drives using spyware. In Germany, the introduction of a government Trojan is still being discussed.

The government trojan is a "technical still birth" and will not work as the authorities imagine, said Günther Wiesauer, CEO of the security company Underground 8. There would be too many players who would work to prevent PC infections: "To start with, the operating system manufacturers are already integrating defence techniques which prevent the installation of malware. On top of that the firewall is still in the way of attackers," he said.

The US, on the other hand, have a working method of Internet surveillance. Using the spy network Echelon, the US intelligence agency can observe all data traffic sent or received by an IP address. The system sits on a central Internet node and is thus able to monitor all of the IP communications -- Web sites visited, e-mail, chat and much more. Technically this would also work in Europe, but data privacy laws make it infeasible, according to Wiesauer.

Advertisement

Talkback 2 comments

    EchelonAnonymous -- 27/11/07

    "The system sits on a central Internet node and is thus able to monitor all of the IP communications -- Web sites visited, e-mail, chat and much more."

    The US government cannot monitor all traffic on the Internet. Contrary to what some people might want to believe not all traffic on the Internet goes through a central node. Billions of packets on the Internet are routed at the edge and do not traverse the backbone.

    EchelonDean -- 27/11/07 (in reply to #320090566)

    It also doesn't help them to decrypt Skype packets.

    Of course, I personally don't believe law enforcement *should* be able to decrypt packets. Let them get a warrent to put a listening device in the handset... don't give them the ability to listen to any conversation they feel like.

Add your opinion


Latest Videos

Blogs

  • Renai LeMay Datacentre disaster lessons
    As a system administrator, the health and status of your datacentre is at the forefront of your mind. But how often do you think about the needs beyond server status and bandwidth?
  • Array E-health too unsexy for COAG
    There will always be something more politically sexy than e-health for state governments, meaning the National E-Health Transition Authority's business case for a national electronic medical record might just sit on the shelf gathering dust forever.
  • Array TelstraUnClear
    Telstra's New Zealand arm TelstraClear is one strange company ...
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured