A Study of Ten Popular Android Mobile VoIP Applications: Are the Communications Encrypted?
Title | A Study of Ten Popular Android Mobile VoIP Applications: Are the Communications Encrypted? |
Publication Type | Conference Paper |
Year of Publication | 2014 |
Authors | Azfar, A., Choo, K.-K.R., Lin Liu |
Conference Name | System Sciences (HICSS), 2014 47th Hawaii International Conference on |
Date Published | Jan |
Keywords | Android mobile devices, Android mobile VoIP applications, cryptography, data privacy, Entropy, Google, Internet, Internet telephony, lawful interceptions, Mobile communication, mobile computing, mobile voice-over-Internet protocol, mVoIP communications, Protocols, Skype, smart phones, telecommunication security, text communication encryption, unauthorized interceptions, user privacy |
Abstract | Mobile Voice over Internet Protocol (mVoIP) applications have gained increasing popularity in the last few years, with millions of users communicating using such applications (e.g. Skype). Similar to other forms of Internet and telecommunications, mVoIP communications are vulnerable to both lawful and unauthorized interceptions. Encryption is a common way of ensuring the privacy of mVoIP users. To the best of our knowledge, there has been no academic study to determine whether mVoIP applications provide encrypted communications. In this paper, we examine Skype and nine other popular mVoIP applications for Android mobile devices, and analyze the intercepted communications to determine whether the captured voice and text communications are encrypted (or not). The results indicate that most of the applications encrypt text communications. However, voice communications may not be encrypted in six of the ten applications examined. |
DOI | 10.1109/HICSS.2014.596 |
Citation Key | 6759199 |
- mobile computing
- user privacy
- unauthorized interceptions
- text communication encryption
- telecommunication security
- smart phones
- Skype
- Protocols
- mVoIP communications
- mobile voice-over-Internet protocol
- Android mobile devices
- Mobile communication
- lawful interceptions
- Internet telephony
- internet
- Entropy
- data privacy
- Cryptography
- Android mobile VoIP applications