information security

Georgia Tech Researchers Design System to Trace Call Paths Across Multiple Networks

October 4, 2010

ATLANTA – October 5, 2010 – Phishing scams are making the leap from email to the world’s voice systems, and a team of researchers in the Georgia Tech College of Computing has found a way to tag fraudulent calls with a digital “fingerprint” that will help separate legitimate calls from phone scams.

Pindrop Security: Georgia Tech Spinoff Secures Silicon Valley Funding for Phone Security Technology


Pindrop Security is using "acoustic fingerprint" technology developed in the Georgia Tech Information Security Center (GTISC) to address security concerns of the telephone network.  Shown are (left to right) assistant professor Patrick Traynor, GTISC director Mustaque Ahamad and Pindrop CEO Vijay Balasubramaniyan. (Photo: Justin Law)

January 23, 2012

How can you be sure that an incoming phone call is really from a customer and not an overseas criminal intent on fraud? For major financial services companies, that’s a growing concern as the telephone system adopts Internet technologies – and the security issues that come with them.

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