hilarious, I watched all 54 minutes of it and seems that all manufacturers of IP phones have the same problem of vulnerability to deal with.
It also tells that a group of first class hackers took over a month to find this and needed unrestricted physical access to the phones to make it happen. They can do it from within the network as well but that also means access to the network.
I run IP phones and digital and I am not worried because if people come into my house then they might also just pick up the phone and dial.
I know that you are not for IP technology (seen in many posts) but I have to tell you that I took more Nortel systems out because people dialed into the mailboxes of people and used the DISA functionality to make $20,000 worth of phone calls than Cisco (nil so far) or any other manufacturer (also nil).
So the vulnerability they talk about in this video is real but having a default password of 1234 in Nortel is by far worse and can be exploited by people with far less technical know how and by just using a phone not thousands of $ worth of computer equipment and a half million dollar education in PC and networking.
Please do not see this as defending the arrogance of Cisco (or any other manufacturer) to say they fixed it and don't really do their job right but also that security problems are there for a lot longer than IP telephony and the worst is on old Nortel equipment as far as I am concerned.
Joe W.
FHandw, ACSS (SME), ACIS (SME)
Interrupt the silence only if you improve it by saying something, otherwise be quiet and everybody will be grateful.