<pre style="margin: 0em;">Hello,<br><br>In some countries i found that they are blocking SIP port 5060<br>so instead of this i change to another port 1221, and its work<br>well. But in one country the are not blocking SIP but they are<br>playing with RTP packets, if they filtered it is VoIP RTP they<br>are doing something called party cannot hear or some time caller<br>cannot hear but called party can hear well.<br><br><br>So i cosider to use SRTP to make encryption. and i am using<br>my asterisk in VPS so i have full control to manage the server.<br>If you guys have better Idea to prevent such kind of issue, it<br>will be good for us.<br><br>Abdul<br><br><br><br><br><br></pre><blockquote style="border-left: 0.2em solid rgb(85, 85, 238); margin: 0em; padding-left: 0.85em;"><tt>Most of the blocking in other countries, was not for RTP traffic, but </tt><tt>for signaling traffic (SIP usually, Mexico x Vonage comes to mind). </tt> <pre style="margin: 0em;">You are sure they
are blocking RTP traffic ?<br></pre> <tt>And, from what I understand, in some places the gov. forced the ISPs to </tt><tt>remove the blocking (at least, I heard of one such a case in Brazil, a </tt><tt>DSL provider started to block SIP, and Anatel, Brazil gov. entity that </tt><tt>regulate telephony and others, asked them to remove the blocking, others </tt><tt>with more knowledge of the case may be able to add their remarks) </tt><tt>Blocking SIP if you control the server is somewhat easy to prevent (if </tt><tt>is a plain dumb UDP port 5060 filtering), just have your server listen </tt><tt>in another UDP port...</tt></blockquote><tt></tt><tt><br></tt><p> 
        
                <hr size=1>See the all-new, redesigned Yahoo.com. <a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=40762/*http://www.yahoo.com/preview"> Check it out.</a>