Microsoft Axing Messenger On March 15th
An anonymous reader writes with news that Microsoft is killing Messenger in favor of Skype. From the article: "Microsoft on Tuesday mass emailed its 100 million+ Messenger users to let them know that the service is officially being retired on March 15, 2013. On that date, all users will be migrated to Skype, which Microsoft acquired back in May 2011 for $8.5 billion. This means Messenger will be shut down in just 66 days. It will only keep working afterwards in mainland China, mainly because Skype is operated there by a local provider called TOM."
Relatedly, an anonymous reader asks: "I am looking to build a Skype replacement for me and some friends and was wondering which languages you would use server side to handle all of the encrypted data streaming? I am thinking to use SIP on a centralized server (as NAT can be a pain to get through). The clients will use end-to-end encryption. Thoughts?"
There are some alternatives already, for variable definitions of working.
IF you have an existing skype account you get 1 shot at merging your 'hotmail/messneger/live' account. If you do not do it right you end up with 2 accounts. You can untangle it but it is a pain and includes emailing skype admins. Even now I am not sure I can undo it...
Makes me wonder how much hidden government involvement there was; complete with back doors only available to ''friendly'' nations.
I've used mumble before, don't know about the encryption. One should be able to maybe pipe the data through an ssh connection?
This is why I tend to go ballistic when someone argues that we should stick with the larger vendor because they provide product stability. I've been told we can't count on the smaller guys to stay in the market and be able to provide support over the long term. Then I look at it and see the the "big guys" kill products right and left depending on their whim and the perceived profitability of a given market. Messenger is a stupid little product but I'm sure there are more than a few people out of that 100M+ base who have some dependence on it and don't want or need to use Skype.
Alex, I'll take keybindings not used by Emacs for $400....
Was this not what Jabber/XMPP was supposed to achieve over a decade ago?
I'd start by looking there. A centralized server is also a single point of failure. Something that tends to be frowned upon by users looking to chat by voice/video/text.
I will have no use for hotmail at all.
I'm not going to bother with skype, I'll just kick the habit of using msn and start to use the "social" aspects of steam instead as it's already installed..
Google Talk and Google Hangout are good obvious alternatives. If you insist on running your own solution, I've had very good experiences with using Elastix. It has everything built in to one package that takes advantage of Asterisk VOIP. I've set it up for multiple companies as their corporate phone system, including some that used it in fairly large call centers. It's also free and has a decent community behind it. They're pretty helpful, and when I was starting out with it I got a lot of good advice on their IRC channel. VOIP, IM, Videoconferencing, and it has good hardware support for all of the telephony devices.
While this is mostly irrelevant for north american users, MSN messenger, later Windows Live Messenger, was a big part of spanish-speaking internet users lives. Oh, the memories of using it to pick up girls ;) back then when you could add anyone and they wouldn't freak out because "they don't know you", like people do in facebook. Late night chats with groups of people, those annnoying emoticons, pink fonts, useless "winks"... it's all in the past now. Oh yes, and girls showing their boobs on cam as well. Friendships, fights, contact blocks...
To be fair, Facebook chat killed Messenger. It's convenient, simple to use and it works well in small screens like netbook machines.
Microsoft screwed up in their last incarnation of messenger. Demanding real names instead of a nickname, moving the legendary hotmail to "outlook", and making that huge resource hog that messenger 2011 was, with integration to "social" bullshit. So heavy that people couldn't even use their machines if messenger was running.
To date there's no match for messenger's "share photos", which let you drag and drop pictures to the chat window and have them automatically resized and compressed to something more decent, and shown "big" in the chat window. With the option, of course, to download full size and keep (I think yahoo messenger has that but it's irrelevant in spanish-speaking land). This isn't an option on facebook and not even drag-and-drop to send a photo works there (MSN was great: Print-Screen, Ctrl-V to instantly send a screen capture).
I did support for small ISPs over the past decade and it was THE biggest problem if messenger didn't work. People didn't mind that their web browsing didn't work as long as messenger worked.
Skype is in no way a replacement for MSN. Skype was designed to make calls, and that's what it insists in doing. Skype chat is horrible. It doesn't seem to actually "close" if you close it (you have to log out, and then it won't automatically log back in in next boot). And no photo share for skype.
I, for one, will be missing "MSN" as people called it here. Most people won't since they have moved to FB chat long ago.
Lync uses a corporate server for it's traffic, so it should be fine. In fact they just significantly raised the price on it!
-- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
No No No, for the Ides of March you need to STAB messenger to death. We come here to bury Messenger, not to praise it!
AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
If you use messenger for IM purposes still, this is a huge downgrade. Skype is comparatively terrible when it comes to text chat.
-- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
Apparently, even this bit of centuries old wisdom is lost on Microsoft...
If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
I say we bring back IRC. Really wasn't it the best? No "like" button. No hipster wannabes eating up IP spaces and valuable bandwidth and if you happened to fine one just open up a copy of Nuke and deal with them the old fashion way.
"Microsoft on Tuesday mass emailed its 100 million+ Messenger users to let them know that the service is officially being retired on March 15, 2013
I've never used messenger, never signed up for it, never even been to the registration page, and I still got an email notice telling me that I need to switch to skype. I think they just emailed everyone who has ever used hotmail, or any variation since it's creation.
I'm told that PSYC is much better than XMPP -- both on the protocol level, the way the stream is decoded, and the ability to scale.
http://about.psyc.eu/Comparison
Makes me wonder what they're going to do about the Messenger clients built in to: Windows 8, Windows Phone 8, Windows Phone 7, Xbox 360, etc. If these clients are going to stop working, will they push out replacement updates for all of them in time? I doubt it. The current version of Windows 8 Skype app is awful - if that's going to be their primary IM solution on Windows 8 then they're going to have to improve it pretty rapidly between now and mid-March.
I kind of wonder if the heads of AOL forgot about AIM and the engineers just keep a low profile.
Bring it back? It never went anywhere; the Eternal September crowd just went to social networks.
Who needs any of these when you have the opportunity to go back ti Microsoft Comic Chat? http://www.digitalspace.com/avatars/cc1.jpg
no comment
Annoying because I use it regularly to communicate with customers and vendors in China and Skype isn't available for BlackBerry. I guess Yahoo! Messenger ugh.
I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.
Haven't they ever heard of Beware the Ides of March ? This will not end well, I fear.
Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
Use the XMPP Jingle extension supported by Asterisk and Freeswitch amongst many others
How well do Asterisk and an IM server integrate together for that? i.e. If I run Asterisk for SIP telephony (calls to sip:foo@example.com go there) and ejabberd for XMPP IM (IMs to xmpp:foo@example.com go there), can I sensibly make instant messages for xmpp:foo@example.com still go to ejabberd and phone calls for xmpp:foo@example.com go to Asterisk (and therefore integrate with the existing phone system)?
http://blog.nexusuk.org
Does skype allow you to paste images/screenshots like MSN does?
No sig today...
Freenode, Undernet, DALnet and EFnet are all still thriving. As of now I'm on at least 6 networks in over 20 channels.
I'd say IRC is still thriving and going strong.
But with people like the OP talking about nuking, I'm glad for IRC. We have the ability to gline kiddies and prevent harassment.
Im pretty sure the IT guys at my wife's school, and likely tons of other businesses, will not install skype on their computer, she hardly got away with getting messenger. Skype has a bad reputation and is seen as something kids use to video chat with their boyfriends and girlfriends, many don't even know it can be used a text messenger application.
Interesting they chose the Ides of March.
Consider Retroshare. It's an encrypted friend to friend network, with chat, filesharing, and a VOIP plugin. It uses the PGP web of trust model, so a little user education is necessary. But it's got a nice clicky gui and works pretty well. The more people who use it, the better it will get, so give it a look.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
Your post was insightful, informative, a fascinating slice of history and an excellent all-around summary. I don't mean to take away from any of it.
But when you wrote:
To date there's no match for messenger's "share photos", which let you drag and drop pictures to the chat window and have them automatically resized and compressed to something more decent, and shown "big" in the chat window. With the option, of course, to download full size and keep
That's not quite true. I regularly use iMessage (the client is called Messages on OSX, the service is called iMessage) to do exactly that. Having used both, I can say that I prefer the iMessage implementation. Not only can I drag and drop photos (songs, files etc.) but the ability to share with both people using the Desktop client (other OSX users) and iOS users (iPhones and iPads) is convenient and VERY useful. It sure would make my life easier if the rest of you would just join me here inside the walled garden...
I would have to say that explosives are the most abused technology in all of history.
Ok, they're both related to skype, but does anyone really think these two items belong in the same story?
Agreed. I'm on two private networks for my employer, and two public networks. Total of 27 channels, for various purposes from socialization to design or problem response. Works great.
Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
The only problem is --- iMessage is not a cross-platform solution. Personally, I'd need it to support OSX, iOS, Android (linux would be nice), and, least important of all (to me), Windows.
skype-open-source
AccountKiller
VB6, Winforms, VBScript, Windows 8.... It's Microsoft once again saying, "Screw your *and* your client's investments in time, money and learning." We just had a 20-something developer with no business sense show a clueless manager with no technical expertise a new technology and we're running with it!
Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
You must have checked a long time ago. There is, indeed, a Skype plugin for libpurple-based messengers which includes Pidgin.
Onda Technology Institute
I know my messenger or communicator or whatever got screwed over already when MS changed over to "MS Lync", so now they are changing to Skype?
Meh. I just won't use it at work anymore, too much of a PITA.
Outside that its FB messanger now anyway. (Who I hear are entering the VOIP and video relms as well, likely to position themselves against MS Skype)
Google has to obey some sort of limits when it comes to collecting data, otherwise they risk get sued and/or examined by the government for illegal activity/privacy invasion... right? I really doubt that Google's data collecting as as extreme as people like you make it out to be. FWIW, I search Google and YouTube with the history turned off, and that's probably the key data they would use. If they sneak into everyone's personal e-mails, phone calls, voicemails, and/or text messages without permission, then they're just opening themselves up to some serious legal trouble.
you have to admire the original skypes creator, 5+ years and still nobody has managed to crack the protocol
This is actually why I vehemently resent Skype's creator. We used to have open protocols that enabled us to do voice over IP, video chat, and video conferencing. Then in came Skype with a proprietary protocol enabling a subset of these features, and they made billions converting the world from open standards to their vendor-lock in.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
Unrelated - the old Messenger service is nothing to do with MSN. The GRC article even says so: "The first thing to understand is that the Windows Messenger Service is completely different from, and not in any way related to, "MSN Messenger", "Windows Messenger", or any other well-known instant messaging system."
Couldn't agree more.
That IS the problem.
And a pretty major one.
Hence my last line about inviting everyone to drink the kool-aid and join me in the walled garden. It really would make my life easier, if everyone would just overlook questions about mysterious pre-approval of applications and Apple getting a 30% cut of everything and just join me here where the toys are shiny, the dragging and dropping works just fine, and no one is axing any instant messenger platform. At least for now.
I would have to say that explosives are the most abused technology in all of history.
you have to admire the original skypes creator, 5+ years and still nobody has managed to crack the protocol
Why? Unbreakable encryption algorithms are widely published.
What takes talent is messing up as badly as something like WEP and still managing to get it past a committee who's supposed to know about stuff like that. I admire the people who managed that, it's industrial strength WTF.
No sig today...
I've only resorted to nuke once, to deal with a troll who came to bother us when there were no admins around. The obnoxious type of troll, who just posts lines full of profanity and childish insults.
They made billions because their protocol and software worked, almost every time, even for near-zero-skill users who wouldn't know what a port number is. Install software, get chatting. There are open protocols, but things like SIP take a bit of setting up.
As best I can tell, it is only with this step, moving MSN users to Skype, that we're really screwed over - there are 3rd party MSN clients, opensauced and whatnut, that at least work somewhat.
With this move, it is Bloated Skype* or nothing.
*: I only have 2 gig of ram - I can feel my computer slow down when Skype is running, also in the latest version.
SIP and NAT just don't get along, SIP is made for an ideal IPv6 world.
Technologically there's no trouble at all making a Skype replacement but try getting people, and worse yet telcos, to accept no-cost voice, text and video communications. See also: The existence of WhatsApp right in the face of XMPP.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
Not only that, the skype UI just plain sucks for IM. No tabbed chats on compact mode, and on regular mode they are vertical and weak, weak notifications, non-functional recent conversations tab and lots more. I emailed them about it and they told me that indeed they were revising their client due to missing features that are already in WLM and know lots of people like/use.
WLM may not be the best or most used out there, but at least its UI works a lot better for IM compared to skype
Open Source Java Web Forum with LDAP authentication
aliens came down, anal probed you and made you forget.
(Un)fortunately this time the anal probing is just part of the regular Microsoft customer experience.
Microsoft is re-engineering these supernodes to make it easier for law enforcement to monitor calls by allowing the supernodes to not only make the introduction but to actually route the voice data of the calls as well. In this way, the actual voice data would pass through the monitored servers and the call is no longer secure. It is essentially a man-in-the-middle attack, and it is made all the easier because Microsoft -– who owns Skype and knows the keys used for the service’s encryption -– is helping.
http://www.extremetech.com/computing/132935-microsoft-tweaking-skype-to-facilitate-wiretapping
"I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
I don't know about Hangout (I never used it, it's flash based, right?), but I don't think Google has the ability to wiretap my OTR protected XMPP chat.
And I still know nobody that currently uses or has ever used Microsoft Messenger or MSN. It was exclusively AIM for us. I hear it's popular in certain regions though, but MSN was always one of the first things I uninstalled.
Now I can do video chat with these MSNers going over to Skype. Yes, the Linux Skype client has been in beta for a million years, but it still works like a champ. I could never get video calls to work in pidgin, amsn, etc.
Now, I just have to hope they don't axe the Linux client... keep the protocol up-to-date on it...
In other news, anyone still using AIM?
The G
Doesn't it make you feel all warm and fuzzy? I think I'd rather submit to the aliens. The "user experience" would be out of this world!
Of course, that's just me - different strokes for different folks and all.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
iMessage is available on OSX, but none of the others you mentioned.
SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
they made billions converting the world from open standards to their vendor-lock in
Think about that a little more. Did anyone hold a gun to the world to force them to switch? No. Clearly the open standards failed the world somehow.
In my personal experience, Ekiga (an implementation of the open standards you speak of) simply doesn't work in a NAT environment. I've tried multiple versions with multiple people, and either the phone doesn't ring, or the person doesn't even appear online. Skype worked. I even ended up giving Skype money.
It's much more productive to figure out why millions can be made switching away from open standards than to hate those who solve the world's problems.
Still, there is one. I didn't say it worked perfectly. And he said there wasn't. There is. Might be useless, but there is.
Anyway, even the native Skype client for Linux is crap. Crashes frequently, sometimes it hangs on 100% cpu usage and has to be killed and looks like a surgery made with a jackhammer.
Onda Technology Institute
Sure, they say they're sending to 100+ Million users, but only a tiny fraction of those are actual people. They could have saved a lot of bandwidth.
Kriston
Don't forget about Microsoft's enabling of Skype for wiretapping. Don't forget that, too many times people forget who they're dealing with, It's Microsoft, don't expect Open and Private.
I contracted at MS testing Messenger 1.0; it was so nice back then, 100 KILObyte install, unicode native, just plain worked.
Then the Bloat...
dont make me smack you in the face with a large trout!!
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
You know, that very article itself also completely counters that point. Perhaps next time you try to invent a conspiracy theory, you should find a source that doesn't prove the exact opposite of your rumours?
For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
It's funny you say that, because you can also log into Skype with a Facebook account. And do you know why? Because Skype powers Facebook's real-time voice/video chat features.
For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
Citrix (Gotomeeting) and Cisco (Webex) are likely chomping at the bit right now.
For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
Their culture must really be a great fit with Microsoft's.
Skype Guy: "You know, there are already open protocols for doing all of this. But I'm just going to ignore the existing standards, create my own proprietary ones, and try to lock customers in!"
The result? Today the world of VOIP is set back years, a fragmented mess of incompatibility, with the leading vendor having a closed, proprietary solution.
Right out of Microsoft's playbook. It's almost as if Bill Gates himself was one of the Skype founders.
Windows Live Messenger (although most Chinese only refer it as MSN) is one of the two major IM services in China (the other one being Tencent QQ). It is so dominant in the market that MS is planning to keep it alive there.
In fact, it might be the only commercially successful consumer product MS has in China (Pirated Windows and Office are so rampant that nobody pay for them. XBOX game consoles are also not officially available in China).
You know, that very article itself also completely counters that point.
No, the article mentions that a spokesperson from Skype completely evades countering that point.
"Skype takes all necessary steps to prevent/defeat nefarious attempts to subvert the Skype experience. Skype takes its users’ safety and security seriously and we work tirelessly to ensure each individual has the best possible experience."
Perhaps you should read prepared statements more carefully and be a little less credulous.
"I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
And you're assuming MSN didn't have that to start with?
Except that with Skype you have the key and it STILL hasn't been broken properly.
Proving my point again. You quoted Skype's response to claims their source code was leaked, and not their response to claims that calls are being routed through the supernodes, which was responded to thusly:
(Emphasis mine). Which is very specific, non-evasive, and the exact opposite of your claims. No surprises there.
For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
This!
Skype Just Works. Sure it's not open source and it's not an open protocol...but it works without fiddling even on Linux, which is why it became so popular. Fairly good sound quality too.
As much as I'd rather everyone use Gtalk, they don't, they use Skype.
The difference is that Microsoft does all that except for the critical part that made Skype successful - the "and it works pretty much everywhere with no effort" part.
Think about that a little more. Did anyone hold a gun to the world to force them to switch? No. Clearly the open standards failed the world somehow.
Of course. I didn't claim anybody forced people to use Skype. Skype won because they made a product that people liked and marketed it successfully. A lot of people didn't know that you could "call people for free" using your computer, until they were told about Skype.
However, none of that invalidates the point that Skype creates vendor-lock in by means of their proprietary protocol. I don't admire people who do that, particularly when they do it in an area where open protocols already exist.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
However, none of that invalidates the point that Skype creates vendor-lock in by means of their proprietary protocol. I don't admire people who do that, particularly when they do it in an area where open protocols already exist.
You're still not thinking. Open protocols still exist; Skype didn't erase them or ban them. They just don't work. Again—it doesn't matter if open protocols exist if the normal person in normal circumstances cannot get a simple phone call to work.
If you resent vendor lock-in so much, why don't you simply make the existing open protocols work? Or create your own open protocol that works?
And the same is true with many other communications protocols.
Skype isn't impressive.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
It was a smart-ass comment, but this is somewhat like pointing out that one version of Outlook is entirely different and data-incompatible with another version of Outlook... the distinction is largely lost for the average user trying to deal with the crud that MS hoists on its users.
Yes.
This has not changed the underlying nature of Skype’s peer-to-peer (P2P) architecture, in which supernodes simply allow users to find one another (calls do not pass through supernodes)
Disingenuous. "They DO not pass through supernodes" is not the same as "They CAN not pass through supernodes."
Microsoft had at that time already obtained a patent describing recording agents that can be placed in a multitude of devices, including routers. There is also the note of a recording agent software that represents “a software module that logically and/or physically sits between the call server and the network.” According to Microsoft, the agent will have access “to each communication sent to and from the call server,” which clearly refers to the general infrastructure of a VoIP service and network.
“The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office published a Microsoft patent application that reaches back to December 2009 and describes ‘recording agents’ to legally intercept VoIP phone calls. The ‘Legal Intercept‘ patent application is one of Microsoft’s more elaborate and detailed patent papers, which is comprehensive enough to make you think twice about the use of VoIP audio and video communications. The document provides Microsoft’s idea about the nature, positioning and feature set of recording agents that silently record the communication between two or more parties.”
http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=PG01&s1=20110153809.PGNR.&OS=DN/20110153809RS=DN/20110153809
The only conclusion you can make is that:
While we don't know the full details of how Skype handles its key exchange, what is clear is that Skype is in a position to impersonate its customers, or, should it be forced, to give a government agency the ability to impersonate its customers. As Skype acts as the gatekeeper of conversations, and the only entity providing any authentication of callers, users have no way of knowing if they're directly communicating with a friend they frequently chat with, or if their connection is being intercepted using a man in the middle attack, made possible due to the disclosure of cryptographic keys by Skype to the government.
http://paranoia.dubfire.net/2012/07/the-known-unknows-of-skype-interception.html?m=1
"I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
I feel we're talking past each other. I'm saying I don't admire the creation of a proprietary protocol for Internet telephony.
You're saying that I could create an open solution that works. You're right. I could. But that doesn't mean I admire the person or company that switched us away from open solutions to their proprietary one.
What I would have admired is someone improving and/or promoting the open solutions so that we would now have interoperable voice over IP similar to how we have interoperable phones, IP stacks, and email. And, like me, Skype's creators could have done that, but chose not to.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
I was trying to prevent confusion, not be a "smart ass", so I apologise if I gave the wrong impression. However, this is nothing like comparing versions of Outlook. Outlook has always been an end-user e-mail client, wheras the two messengers in question are not alike. One is an IM client, the other was a built-in Windows system service that one typically interacted with at the command line ("net send" etc.).
Really? I kind of remember its being decrypted long ago (something about using the first bytes in the stream as RC4 seed) and the researchers even managed to get to be a supernode and mess around with clients.
in the case of China, the P2P is disabled and it only runs through the government filtered "Tom" servers (supernodes). A year or so ago I think it was McGill researchers (somebody in a uni in Canada anyway,) got into the server and found ALL the messages from some number of years stored in plain text.
Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
Fair enough, especially as I *was* trying to be a smart ass in the original comment :). As I recall, insomuch as I avoid Windows like the plague but still have to use it in corporate environments, there was some overlap in services (or perhaps just confusion), but I've been known to be wrong.
Disingenuous. "They DO not pass through supernodes" is not the same as "They CAN not pass through supernodes."
Microsoft had at that time already obtained a patent describing recording agents that can be placed in a multitude of devices, including routers. There is also the note of a recording agent software that represents “a software module that logically and/or physically sits between the call server and the network.” According to Microsoft, the agent will have access “to each communication sent to and from the call server,” which clearly refers to the general infrastructure of a VoIP service and network.
Disingenuous. "They DO NOT pass through supernodes" clearly says that calls do not pass through supernodes, whether they can or not. Furthermore, the patent on recording agents is completely irrelevant - it's clearly something useful for.. oh, I don't know... Unified Communications Systems like Lync.
http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=PG01&s1=20110153809.PGNR.&OS=DN/20110153809RS=DN/20110153809
The only conclusion you can make is that:
While we don't know the full details of how Skype handles its key exchange, what is clear is that Skype is in a position to impersonate its customers, or, should it be forced, to give a government agency the ability to impersonate its customers. As Skype acts as the gatekeeper of conversations, and the only entity providing any authentication of callers, users have no way of knowing if they're directly communicating with a friend they frequently chat with, or if their connection is being intercepted using a man in the middle attack, made possible due to the disclosure of cryptographic keys by Skype to the government.
http://paranoia.dubfire.net/2012/07/the-known-unknows-of-skype-interception.html?m=1
Actually, no, that's not the only conclusion you can make. It's the only conclusion that you are willing to make, because you're a tinfoil hat nutter.
For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".