home phone service voip
Cisco Systems has disclosed that a core component of its enterprise VOIP system is vulnerable to several serious security flaws. The flaws could allow remote attackers to compromise a home voip company's VOIP network, redirect or listen in on calls and carry VoIP Main Page
out other nastiness, according to Cisco and Internet Security Systems (ISS), which discovered the flaws. While the bugs haven't based business free home voip yet been exploited, they represent one of the most high-profile security scares in enterprise IP telephony to date. Enterprises
are moving quickly to shift to IP-based telephone networks, VoIP Main Page
with Gartner home phone service voip predicting that by 2007, 97 percent of new enterprise phone systems installed in North America will be either VOIP or hybrid. Cisco leads the market at the moment by a home phone voip wide margin, with VoIP Main Page
a 42 percent share in North America, followed by Avaya with 14 percent, 3Com with 11 percent and Nortel with 9
percent, according to Gartner's research. Cisco home service voip reported five separate security bugs in CallManager, the call- processing component of the Cisco IP telephony system. The most serious is in the aupair.exe service, which could allow a remote VoIP Main Page
home based business voip attacker to cause a buffer overflow and execute malicious code. Aupair.exe can't be disabled for normal CallManager use, Cisco said. CallManager is vulnerable in its default configuration,
and an attack home office voip could be carried out without the need for prior authentication, ISS said. An attacker may be able to VoIP Main Page
redirect calls or perform eavesdropping as a result of this compromise. Successful based best business home voip exploitation of this vulnerability could be used to gain unauthorized access to networks and machines with Cisco VOIP products, the security firm said in an advisory. Cisco has released
patches voip with home security system for the affected versions of CallManager, including 3.3 and VoIP Main Page
earlier, 4.0 and 4.1. Its advisory and patching instructions are on Cisco's Web site.
Cisco Systems has disclosed that a core component of its enterprise VOIP system is vulnerable to several serious security flaws. The flaws could allow remote attackers to compromise a home voip company's VOIP network, redirect or listen in on calls and carry VoIP Main Page
out other nastiness, according to Cisco and Internet Security Systems (ISS), which discovered the flaws. While the bugs haven't based business free home voip yet been exploited, they represent one of the most high-profile security scares in enterprise IP telephony to date. Enterprises
are moving quickly to shift to IP-based telephone networks, VoIP Main Page
with Gartner home phone service voip predicting that by 2007, 97 percent of new enterprise phone systems installed in North America will be either VOIP or hybrid. Cisco leads the market at the moment by a home phone voip wide margin, with VoIP Main Page
a 42 percent share in North America, followed by Avaya with 14 percent, 3Com with 11 percent and Nortel with 9
percent, according to Gartner's research. Cisco home service voip reported five separate security bugs in CallManager, the call- processing component of the Cisco IP telephony system. The most serious is in the aupair.exe service, which could allow a remote VoIP Main Page
home based business voip attacker to cause a buffer overflow and execute malicious code. Aupair.exe can't be disabled for normal CallManager use, Cisco said. CallManager is vulnerable in its default configuration,
and an attack home office voip could be carried out without the need for prior authentication, ISS said. An attacker may be able to VoIP Main Page
redirect calls or perform eavesdropping as a result of this compromise. Successful based best business home voip exploitation of this vulnerability could be used to gain unauthorized access to networks and machines with Cisco VOIP products, the security firm said in an advisory. Cisco has released
patches voip with home security system for the affected versions of CallManager, including 3.3 and VoIP Main Page
earlier, 4.0 and 4.1. Its advisory and patching instructions are on Cisco's Web site.
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