08-13-2012 02:42 PM - edited 03-16-2019 12:41 PM
Hi,
Can an IP Phone have/support a cable "splitter" that allows someone to eavesdrop on a call. If so, is there any special make / model?
Customer is not lookign to you silent monitoring etc. They prefer the old fashion way
J
Solved! Go to Solution.
08-14-2012 02:31 AM
Hi Jules,
In addition to the great info from Arun (+5 Arun )
If you use Plantronics Headsets there is a "Y" cord made specifically for this purpose.
"Y" Training Adapter -
The Y training cable allows you to connect two headsets with QD (Quick Disconnect) connections to one phone. It also includes a mute switch which allows you to mute either headset. We have used these in many environments very
successfully
http://www.plantronics.com/us/product/y-adapter-trainer
Cheers!
Rob
"Always movin' ahead and never lookin' back" - Springsteen
08-13-2012 11:59 PM
Hi Jules,
Feels a bit weird when the facility of silent monitoring or "Barge In" feature gives the customer much more flexibility than going to hard wire the cables. A small demo to the customer should turn him around to use these features.
Anyways, to answer your question, the only thing I can think of is by spanning the switch port to another, hook a laptop to that port and capture the traffic by using a Sniffer or Wireshark tool. You can also use a Hub between the phone and switchport (provided the phone gets power from a power brick and cannot use PoE). A third alternative is to span the switchport behind the phone and connect the laptop/PC with the wireshark/sniffer tool.
There are two drawbacks:
1.) The audio will not be realtime. The customer has to capture the entire traffic before he/she can listen to it.
2.) If the phones are usign SRTP (secure RTP), then this will be more painful since you will have to decrypt the RTP stream before listening to it.
This link lets you know how to listen to the captured RTP stream.
Not aware if there is any other RJ 45 cable splitter that can be used to split voice traffic because ideally we are speaking about conferencing three parties into a same call. And conferencing requires conference resources to be invoked.
Regards,
Arun Kumar
Please rate useful posts !!!!
08-14-2012 02:19 AM
HI Arun,
Thanks for the info.....maybe should have explained it abit better. They are looking for the cable splitter to be on the RJ11 cable going to the headset. ie having 1 phone with 2 headsets.
Cheers
J
08-14-2012 02:59 AM
Hi Jules,
Rob's solution will work out for the Laptop with USB headsets.
I think a RJ 11 splitter cable can be connected into the phone headset/handset socket. You can google it out.
There are many vendors who offer the product. Haven't tested it out though.
Regards,
Arun Kumar
Please rate useful posts !!!
08-14-2012 02:31 AM
Hi Jules,
In addition to the great info from Arun (+5 Arun )
If you use Plantronics Headsets there is a "Y" cord made specifically for this purpose.
"Y" Training Adapter -
The Y training cable allows you to connect two headsets with QD (Quick Disconnect) connections to one phone. It also includes a mute switch which allows you to mute either headset. We have used these in many environments very
successfully
http://www.plantronics.com/us/product/y-adapter-trainer
Cheers!
Rob
"Always movin' ahead and never lookin' back" - Springsteen
08-14-2012 05:37 AM
Hi Arun,
Just an FYI here
The solution I provided is meant for use with Cisco IP phones not laptops
with USB headsets. We use these in many areas on our campus quite successfully.
Cheers!
Rob
"Always movin' ahead and never lookin' back" - Springsteen
08-14-2012 01:52 PM
Cheers guys. Very helpful
J
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide