VADODARA: They need not bother 
            about wiretaps, radio surveillance,bugs that intrude digital 
            privacy, or the fear of being eavesdropped during cellular 
            conversations any more - local mafias seem to be a step ahead when 
            it comes to using technology. 
            Their 
            latest love if you had asked them is internet telephony. From hawala 
            transactions, fixing extortion rates, confirming drug deals to 
            betting on cricket matches, you name it, they do it. 
            
            
            Internet telephony or VoIP 
            (Voice Over Internet Protocol) has emerged as a popular medium for 
            middlemen to address demands of the murky world, leaving 
            intelligence and law enforcement agencies beleaguered as these 
            new-age malefactors erode their ability to keep tab over 
            them.   
            Twenty-six year old, Mustaffa 
            Arif is a middleman for 30 odd customers spread across New York , Mumbai and 
            Kenya . He helps 
            route hawala transactions worth Rs 7 crore a month among these 
            places. 
            
            "I get 0.2 per cent of the 
            amount that has been transacted. Most of my calls are PC-to-PC 
            leaving no chance for monitoring agencies to tap my conversations," 
            says Arif.   
            Arif communicates with his aides 
            at least twice a week, once the deals are in place, he fixes a 
            brokerage and the amount is shared. "Most of my customers are in 
            Mumbai. My job is to sit here and broker deals," says Arif. 
            
            
            Rajiv Patel has links with drug 
            dealers in Mumbai, he takes care of their payments and makes sure 
            that both the supplier as well as the receivers get their payments 
            in time, "My dealers are in Nepal 
            , Sri Lanka 
            and Kenya 
            . All I have to ensure is that the 
            transaction happens at the right time and at the right place. I have 
            membership of at least 25 web based dialler networks and use any 
            local internet cafe for making calls", says Patel.   
            "Unlike regular PSTN lines which 
            are centralised networks, wiretapping conversations is easier. But 
            eavesdropping on VoIP calls which are decentalised networks, is next 
            to impossible", says the director of D2V cafi Dushyant Patel. 
            
            
            In case of a VoIP call to a 
            regular telephone line, voice is broken down into small packets of 
            encrypted data and then routed to the destination through a gateway 
            operated by an ISP.   
            A 'codec' (coder-decoder) 
            software that comes built-in with the VoIP dialer maps the dialed 
            number at the gateway and routes these data packets to the receiver 
            through the local PSTN exchange after decrypting them. 
            
            "Sniffing through a sheer 
            magnitude of data packets in forms of e-mails and VoIP that is being 
            transacted across an IP network makes the problem even worse", says 
            a network security engineer Parag Parikh. 
            
            "To scan through all the data 
            and then zero in on a particular type of voice packet would require 
            to implement the 'codec' algorithm that would break into the packet 
            and decode the conversations. But that would require at least a 
            year, and I don't think anyone talks that long", adds Parikh.