Skype Steps Up Security Spin Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Thursday, 06 July 2006
Under the dubious title "Skype fights back" (we think it should be more like Skype Fesses Up), Techworld has outlined how peer-2-peer voice client developer Skype has begun a campaign to address some of the security concerns it has so far been denying.

The article reveals that Skype has begun a stealth public relations campaign talking to selected journalists in the US - Techworld being one of them.

The eBay-owned company has also appointed an internal staffer to develop security guidelines for enterprises concerned about the way Skype introduces potential vulnerabilities on their networks.

According to the Techworld piece, Skype's CSO, Kurt Sauer, says the company is even reviewing the way it recommends user patches and upgrades required to fix security vulnerabilities.

It's really quite outrageous that a company supplying software to a claimed 100 million plus users can get away with passing off patches as an optional upgrade without explaining exactly why it is required. They should be doing more than "looking at the issues".

Skype tries to pass off its tardy attitude to enterprise security on the basis that it must remain difficult to identify and track Skype traffic so that US cable companies can not block the service which threatens their revenues.

Sauer told Techworld: "One of the reasons Skype is difficult o [sic] find is that the people who provide the carrier services [ISPs, telcos] are in competition with Skype."

"We don't want the product to work in such a way as to allow it to be degraded," he said.

Sauer claims that "unnamed US cable companies" were blocking Skype traffic so as to degrade the service and make their own competing offerings more attractive.

This may be so, but do we have to have a series of serious security breaches, court cases and injunctions before Skype will face up to the responsibilities it has to users and corporate security staff?

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