Well... yeah, kinda-sometimes maybe. If any network device has any code that is SIP/RTP aware, that code can be poorly configured or make a mistake. Hiding SIP/RTP inside anything else is one way to avoid being seen by bad configs or buggy code.
A VPN can't prevent backhoe drivers from digging up your fiber, but it can maybe prevent keyboard drivers from munging your packets. It's not a guaranteed fix, but it is one more RFC-3093-ish card you can play that might help in some scenarios. David -----Original Message----- From: VoiceOps <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Alex Balashov via VoiceOps Sent: Friday, March 8, 2024 5:33 AM To: VoiceOps <[email protected]> Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [VoiceOps] One Way Audio - Frontier Comm (Los Angeles area) Caution: External email - Please use caution opening links and attachments from external senders > On 8 Mar 2024, at 08:32, Mike Hammett via VoiceOps <[email protected]> > wrote: > > I don't trust last mile networks to reliably deliver SIP calls. I usually end > up putting them into VPNs, TLS, etc. VPNs and TLS make last-mile networks more reliable? :-) -- Alex -- Alex Balashov Principal Consultant Evariste Systems LLC Web: https://evaristesys.com Tel: +1-706-510-6800 _______________________________________________ VoiceOps mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops _______________________________________________ VoiceOps mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops
