> I've found that 99.999% of attacks are simply automated drive-bys looking
to find unsecured PBXs. There are enough of those sitting around on the
Internet to keep the scammers happy.
I hear ya.
Tom
--
LogMeIn Centra
Thanks James and thanks David for your recommendation of the Acrobits
Groundwire softphone. I can report that I leave it in the background and
amazingly I have not actually noticed a great deal of difference in battery
life. The reason for this, as per this url:
http://www.acrobits.cz/39/ios4-a
Michael,
I also use the Bria client (for Android). Up until a couple months ago,
I was running Asterisk 1.4, so I wasn't able to use TCP/TLS or SRTP.
Since I ran into many issues with my phone being NAT'd remotely (either
over WiFi or 3G/4G), I ran an OpenVPN client on the device which worked
Thanks David. I am downloading this soft phone now and my hand is up also for
seeing this on the web interface.
Regards
Michael Knill
On 02/11/2012, at 3:51 AM, David Kerr wrote:
> Michael,
> I use TLS and SRTP. Following instructions I found at
> http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/view/SIP+T
Michael,
I use TLS and SRTP. Following instructions I found at
http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/view/SIP+TLS I was quickly able to create the
necessary certificate on Astlinux and enable TLS in sip.conf. Then it was
a simple case of setting transport=tls and encryption=yes in the settings
for one
Am 01.11.2012 um 07:38 schrieb Michael Knill:
> Hi group
Hi Michael,
> I am just wondering what people are using for remote extension registration
> onto the Astlinux box? Currently using an iPhone with the Bria client by
> Counterpath.
> I am targeting this feature in my marketing which is b
Hi group
I am just wondering what people are using for remote extension registration
onto the Astlinux box? Currently using an iPhone with the Bria client by
Counterpath.
I am targeting this feature in my marketing which is being driven by an every
increasing mobile workforce.
Here are some o