
	by Louis Charbonneau
	WIESBADEN, Germany
	November 22, 2007
	
	from
	
	Reuters Website
	
	
	WIESBADEN, Germany (Reuters)
	
	German police are unable to decipher the 
	encryption used in the Internet telephone software Skype to monitor calls by 
	suspected criminals and terrorists, Germany's top police officer said on 
	Thursday.
	
	Skype allows users to make telephone calls over the Internet from their 
	computer to other Skype users free of charge.
	
	Law enforcement agencies and intelligence services have used wiretaps since 
	the telephone was invented, but implementing them is much more complex in 
	the modern telecommunications market where the providers are often foreign 
	companies.
	
		
		"The encryption with Skype telephone software... creates grave difficulties 
	for us," Joerg Ziercke, president of Germany's Federal Police Office (BKA) 
	told reporters at an annual gathering of security and law enforcement 
	officials.
"We can't decipher it. That's why we're talking about source 
	telecommunication surveillance - that is, getting to the source before 
	encryption or after it's been decrypted."
	
	
	Experts say Skype and other Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) calling 
	software are difficult to intercept because they work by breaking up voice 
	data into small packets and switching them along thousands of router paths 
	instead of a constant circuit between two parties, as with a traditional 
	call.
	
	Ziercke said they were not asking Skype to divulge its encryption keys or 
	leave "back doors open" for German and other country's law enforcement 
	authorities.
	
		
		"There are no discussions with Skype. I don't think that would help," he 
	said, adding that he did not want to harm the competitiveness of any 
	company. "I don't think that any provider would go for that."
	
	
	Ziercke said there was a vital need for German law enforcement agencies to 
	have the ability to conduct on-line searches of computer hard drives of 
	suspected terrorists using "Trojan horse" spyware.
	
	These searches are especially important in cases where the suspects are 
	aware that their Internet traffic and phone calls may be monitored and 
	choose to store sensitive information directly on their hard drives without 
	emailing it.
	
	Spyware computer searches are illegal in Germany, where people are sensitive 
	about police surveillance due to the history of the Nazis' Gestapo secret 
	police and the former East German 
	
	Stasi.
	
	Ziercke said worries were overblown and that on-line searches would need to 
	be conducted only on rare occasions.
	
		
		"We currently have 230 proceedings related to suspected Islamists," Ziercke 
	said. "I can imagine that in two or three of those we would like to do 
	this."