A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it
- Title:
- A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it
- Speaker:
- Christopher Soghoian
- Description:
-
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Who is listening in on your phone calls? On a landline, it could be anyone, says privacy activist Christopher Soghoian, because surveillance backdoors are built into the phone system by default, to allow governments to listen in. But then again, so could a foreign intelligence service ... or a criminal. Which is why, says Soghoian, some tech companies are resisting governments' call to build the same backdoors into mobile phones and new messaging systems. Learn how some tech companies are working to keep your calls and messages private.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
- closed TED
- Project:
- TEDTalks
- Duration:
- 06:16
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it | ||
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it | ||
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it | ||
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it | ||
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it | ||
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it | ||
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it | ||
Apuyka C edited Mongolian subtitles for A brief history of phone wiretapping — and how to avoid it |