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Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) recording is a subset of telephone recording or voice logging, first used by call centers and now being used by all types of businesses. There are many reasons for recording voice over IP call traffic such as: reducing company vulnerability to lawsuits by maintaining recorded evidence, complying with telephone call recording laws, increasing security, employee training and performance reviews, enhancing employee control and alignment, verifying data, sharing data as well as customer satisfaction and enhancing call center agent morale.[1]

Operation

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By definition, Voice over IP is audio converted into digital packets and then converted to IP packets.[2] VoIP recording is accomplished either by sniffing the network or by having the packets duplicated and directed to the recorder—passive recording or active recording, respectively.[3][4]

Challenges

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VoIP is usually implemented as a cost-saving measure over POTS (Plain old telephone systems). The same holds true now for VoIP recording. Most recording vendors are able to record the various standards of VoIP such as G.711, G.729a/b and G.723 and software-only solutions as compared to the intensive hardware and software associated with legacy PBX recording.[6]

Today, most of the VoIP vendors are offering VoIP recording methods specific to their VoIP call and communications management servers. These vendors are offering what is referred to as active VoIP recording where the recording vendor's solution becomes an "active" participant within the call for recording purposes. This approach offers some benefits over the long established method of sniffing (Passive) recording in environments where the handsets to be recorded are off site or in remote locations, or in situations where the network routing would mean that a passive solution would be overcomplicated. It also greatly simplifies recording internal calls, as it no longer necessary to duplicate the audio streamed between two handsets to the voice recorder as the telephony system will automatically manage this in any solution.[citation needed]

Disadvantages of "active" call recordings can include overheads on the PBX, the need for agent interaction and changes to the quality of the call. "Passive" call-recording software works by using packet filter technology to listen for VoIP calls on the LAN on a monitored port. The RTP stream is then captured and converted to a WAV file for storage and retrieval.[7]

Other methods

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VoIP calls can be recorded via streaming audio recording applications. Most call centers and other organizations required to record calls would more often use a recording system offered by the softphone or IP PBX. Streaming audio recorders can be useful for home-based recording.[8][9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "VoIP recording - a kind of voice logging or telephone recording". Word Systems. 2016-06-02. Retrieved 2020-11-07.
  2. ^ "How VoIP Works".
  3. ^ Pisoni, Galena (2020-01-01). "Mediating distance: new interfaces and interaction design techniques to follow and take part in remote museum visits". Journal of Systems and Information Technology. 22 (4): 329–350. doi:10.1108/JSIT-03-2020-0038. ISSN 1328-7265. S2CID 229424384.
  4. ^ Waltermann, M.; Lewcio, B.; Vidales, P.; Moller, S. (2008). "A Technique for Seamless VoIP-Codec Switching in Next Generation Networks". 2008 IEEE International Conference on Communications. IEEE. pp. 1772–1776. doi:10.1109/icc.2008.340. ISBN 978-1-4244-2075-9. S2CID 12778845.
  5. ^ Dwivedi, Himanshu (2009). Hacking VoIP: Protocols, Attacks, and Countermeasures. No Starch Press. ISBN 9781593271633.
  6. ^ "VoIP Protocols & Standards » Electronics Notes". www.electronics-notes.com. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  7. ^ "Converting RTP to audio". VoIP-Info. 2005-08-08. Retrieved 2020-10-31.
  8. ^ "VoIP recording - a kind of voice logging or telephone recording". Word Systems. 2016-06-02. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
  9. ^ VOIP Phone Service, 25 July 2023