|
Cellular forums Home > Archive > Cell Phones in Great Britain > April 2007 > Skype/tracing users
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
| Author |
Skype/tracing users
|
|
|
| Hypothetical question: If a Skype user (no Skypein, so no caller ID) is
using Skypeout to make nuisance phone calls to, say, a BT landline, can
that user be traced by e.g. the police?
Not that I'm considering becoming a heavy breather or anything; just
wondering...
--
Abo
BATracer: Browser Based Racing Simulation:
http://batracer.com/-1FrontPage.htm?6q0
| |
|
| Abo wrote:
> Hypothetical question: If a Skype user (no Skypein, so no caller ID) is
> using Skypeout to make nuisance phone calls to, say, a BT landline, can
> that user be traced by e.g. the police?
>
> Not that I'm considering becoming a heavy breather or anything; just
> wondering...
>
>
Oops, this was intended for uk.telecom...
--
Abo
BATracer: Browser Based Racing Simulation:
http://batracer.com/-1FrontPage.htm?6q0
| |
| Colin Wilson 2007-04-11, 12:33 pm |
| > Hypothetical question: If a Skype user (no Skypein, so no caller ID) is
> using Skypeout to make nuisance phone calls to, say, a BT landline, can
> that user be traced by e.g. the police?
> Not that I'm considering becoming a heavy breather or anything; just
> wondering...
Probably, but it might take an approach by the police to skype to
release the logs...
I can't remember the last time I checked the skype T&Cs, but they
probably allow for the release of such into without a court order,
BICBW
| |
|
| On Apr 11, 5:16 pm, Abo <n...@spam.thanks> wrote:
> Hypothetical question: If a Skype user (no Skypein, so no caller ID) is
> using Skypeout to make nuisance phone calls to, say, a BT landline, can
> that user be traced by e.g. the police?
>
> Not that I'm considering becoming a heavy breather or anything; just
> wondering...
>
Even if there is a SkypeIn number, it is not sent as caller ID
as for investigation, I don't know, but as it takes between a week and
a month or never to get a reply from Skype customer services, I hope
the Police have a better method of approach, but also bear in mind
that there could be more than one country involved
| |
|
| andy wrote:
> On Apr 11, 5:16 pm, Abo <n...@spam.thanks> wrote:
>
> Even if there is a SkypeIn number, it is not sent as caller ID
Didn't know that; I've never used Skypeout
> that there could be more than one country involved
Yeah, that's what started me thinking about it. I bet the police would
get frustrated and give up, unless there was some *serious* crime
involved. Maybe in that case they'd work with their foreign
counterparts. There's nothing like a free trip abroad ;)
--
Abo
BATracer: Browser Based Racing Simulation:
http://batracer.com/-1FrontPage.htm?6q0
| |
| Dennis Ferguson 2007-04-12, 10:33 pm |
| On 2007-04-12, Abo <no@spam.thanks> wrote:
> andy wrote:
>
> Yeah, that's what started me thinking about it. I bet the police would
> get frustrated and give up, unless there was some *serious* crime
> involved. Maybe in that case they'd work with their foreign
> counterparts. There's nothing like a free trip abroad ;)
Actually I wouldn't count on this being all that difficult for the
police. The police wouldn't necessarily know the call came from a Skype
user, but they'd certainly know which carrier delivered the call to the
UK phone network (for Skype I think this is Cable & Wireless), and would
ask them. I doubt Cable & Wireless is limited to Skype's support channel,
and would probably have a way to obtain the information Skype knows about
the originator of the call for law enforcement purposes. I don't know
about the UK, but in other countries it wouldn't be legal for a
carrier to deliver calls for Skype if a call's origin couldn't be
located by the carrier in a reasonable hurry.
Dennis Ferguson
| |
|
|
|
|
|