Configuring Security Features; Tls - Matrix SPARSH VP710 User Manual

Smart video ip deskphone
Hide thumbs Also See for SPARSH VP710:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

CHAPTER 14
This chapter provides information for making configuration changes for the following security-related features:
Transport Layer Security
Secure Real-Time Transport Protocol
Encrypting Configuration Files
"User Password"
"Auto-Logout Time"
"Keypad Lock (Phone Lock)"

TLS

TLS is a commonly-used protocol for providing communications privacy and managing the security of message
transmission, allowing IP phones to communicate with other remote parties and connect to the HTTPS URL for
provisioning in a way that is designed to prevent eavesdropping and tampering.
TLS protocol is composed of two layers: TLS Record Protocol and TLS Handshake Protocol. The TLS Record
Protocol completes the actual data transmission and ensures the integrity and privacy of the data. The TLS
Handshake Protocol allows the server and client to authenticate each other and negotiate an encryption algorithm
and cryptographic keys before data is exchanged.
The TLS protocol uses asymmetric encryption for authentication of key exchange, symmetric encryption for
confidentiality, and message authentication codes for integrity.
Symmetric encryption: For symmetric encryption, the encryption key and the corresponding decryption
key can be told by each other. In most cases, the encryption key is the same as the decryption key.
Asymmetric encryption: For asymmetric encryption, each user has a pair of cryptographic keys – a
public encryption key and a private decryption key. The information encrypted by the public key can only
be decrypted by the corresponding private key and vice-versa. Usually, the receiver keeps its private key.
The public key is known by the sender, so the sender sends the information encrypted by the known public
key, and then the receiver uses the private key to decrypt it.
IP phones support TLS version 1.0. A cipher suite is a named combination of authentication, encryption, and
message authentication code (MAC) algorithms used to negotiate the security settings for a network connection
using the TLS/SSL network protocol. IP phones support the following cipher suites:
Matrix SPARSH VP710 User Guide
Configuring Security
Features
and
"Administrator Password"
701

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents