
I would hope that they would not only develop a better standard, but also ensure that the encryption provisions are in fact implemented by manufacturers. To my mind the most frightful part of the DeDECTed groups work was finding that some DECT implementations were not encrypted at all. Further, that there was essentially no way for a non-technical user to know if the DECT system that they were buying was encrypted or not.
In a sort of related move it appears that Siemens Gigaset range now includes a model S965 (pictured left) that includes 3072 bit public key encryption. From their description of the device:
If privacy is a priority, look no further than the Gigaset SL965, the world’s first cordless DECT telephone with point-to-point call encryption .
From the features page on the device:
- Comfortable menu for easy use in English, French and German (other languages on request)
- Illuminated MWI
- Improved range and voice quality in secure mode
- Strongest and most secure algorithms commercially available today
- 3072 bit Diffie-Hellman Public Key exchange
- AES 128 bit in CBC mode
- 256 bit Secure Hash Function
- Readout-hash based key authentication
- Entire Key Generation, Key Exchange and Encryption done in the handset for maximum security
- Encryption key is destroyed as soon as the call ends and freshly generated with each call
- Also supports normal unencrypted calls, unencrypted SMS, address telephone book, appointments etc.