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Skype

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Retired telecommunications software service/application
This article is about the software. For the subsidiary company that developed it, seeSkype Technologies. For the enterprise application formerly known as Microsoft Lync, seeSkype for Business.

Skype
Logo of Skype (2019–present)
Screenshot of Skype version 8 for Windows desktop
Skype 8 for Windows
Original authorsPriit Kasesalu andJaan Tallinn
Developers
Initial release29 August 2003 (22 years ago) (2003-08-29)
Stable release(s)[±]
Windows,UWP, discontinued15.150.3125.0 / 5 May 2025; 6 months ago (2025-05-05)[1][2][3]
Windows, desktop, discontinued8.150.0.125 / 5 May 2025; 6 months ago (2025-05-05)[1][2]
macOS, discontinued8.150.0.125 / 5 May 2025; 6 months ago (2025-05-05)[1][2]
Linux, discontinued8.150.0.125 / 5 May 2025; 6 months ago (2025-05-05)[1][4]
Android, discontinued8.150.0.125 / 5 May 2025; 6 months ago (2025-05-05)[5][6][7]
iOS, discontinued8.150.0.125 / 5 May 2025; 6 months ago (2025-05-05)[5][8]
Operating systemWindows,Windows Server,Windows Phone,macOS,Linux,Android,iOS,iPadOS,WatchOS,Wear OS,HoloLens,Xbox One,Xbox Series X/S
PredecessorMSN Messenger
SuccessorMicrosoft Teams
Available in108 languages[9]
TypeVideoconferencing,VoIP andInstant messaging
LicenseProprietary software
Websitewww.skype.com (archived January 2025)
Part ofa series on
Skype

Skype (/skp/) was aproprietary telecommunicationsapplication operated bySkype Technologies, a division ofMicrosoft, best known forIP-basedvideotelephony, videoconferencing andvoice calls. It also hadinstant messaging, file transfer,debit-based calls tolandline and mobile telephones (overtraditional telephone networks), and other features. It was available on various desktop, mobile, and video game console platforms.

Skype was created byNiklas Zennström,Janus Friis, and fourEstonian developers, and first released in August 2003. In September 2005,eBay acquired it for $2.6 billion.[10] In September 2009,[11]Silver Lake,Andreessen Horowitz, and theCanada Pension Plan Investment Board bought 65% of Skype for $1.9 billion from eBay, valuing the business at $2.92 billion. In May 2011, Microsoft bought Skype for $8.5 billion and used it to replace its ownWindows Live Messenger. As of 2011, most of the development team and 44% of all the division's employees were inTallinn andTartu,Estonia.[12][13][14]

Skype originally featured a hybridpeer-to-peer andclient–server system.[15] It became entirely powered by Microsoft-operatedsupernodes in May 2012;[16] in 2017, it changed from a peer-to-peer service to a centralizedAzure-based service. In February 2023, it was used by 36 million people each day.[17]

The service was retired on 5 May 2025,[18][19][20] and the website now redirects users toMicrosoft Teams.[21][22][better source needed]

Etymology

The name for the software was derived from the words "sky" and "peer-to-peer", the latter of which described the software'snetwork architecture.[15] This was then abbreviated to "Skyper"; however, some of the domain names forSkyper were already taken.[23] By dropping the final "r", the title became "Skype", for which domain names were available at the time.[24]

History

Main article:Skype Technologies
Skype icon (2006–2012)
Skype logo (2006–2012)

Skype was founded in 2003 byNiklas Zennström, fromSweden, andJanus Friis, fromDenmark.[25] The software was created by EstoniansAhti Heinla,Priit Kasesalu,Jaan Tallinn, andToivo Annus.[26] Friis and Annus are credited with the idea of reducing the cost of voice calls by using a P2P protocol like that ofKazaa.[27] An early alpha version was created and tested in spring 2003, and the first public beta version was released on 29 August 2003.[28][27]

In June 2005, Skype entered an agreement with Polish web portal Onet.pl for an integrated offering on the Polish market.[29] On 12 September 2005,eBay Inc. agreed to acquire Luxembourg-based Skype Technologies SA for approximately US$2.5 billion in up-front cash and eBay stock, plus potential performance-based consideration.[30] On 1 September 2009, eBay announced it was selling 65% of Skype toSilver Lake,Andreessen Horowitz, and theCanada Pension Plan Investment Board for US$1.9 billion, valuing Skype at US$2.75 billion.[31] On 14 July 2011, Skype partnered with Comcast to bring its video chat service to Comcast subscribers via HDTV sets.[32]

On 17 June 2013, Skype released free video messaging services for Windows, Mac OS, iOS, iPadOS, Android, and BlackBerry.[33]

Between 2017 and 2020, Skype collaborated withPayPal to provide a money-send feature, enabling users to transfer funds via the Skype mobile app in the middle of a conversation.[34]

Microsoft acquisition

Skype icon (2012–2017)
Skype logo (2012–2017)
Skype icon with logo (2017–2019)

On 10 May 2011,Microsoft Corporation acquiredSkype Communications, S.à r.l for US$8.5 billion.[35] It was incorporated as a division of Microsoft, which acquired all its technologies with the purchase. The acquisition was completed on 13 October 2011.[35][36] Microsoft began integrating the Skype service with its own products. Along with taking over the development of existing Skype desktop andmobile apps, it developed a dedicated client app for its then-newly released, touch-focusedWindows 8 andWindows RT operating systems, which were made available fromWindows Store when the then-new OS launched on 26 October 2012. The following year, it became the default messaging app forWindows 8.1, replacing the Windows 8 Messaging app at the time, and was pre-installed on every device that came with or upgraded to 8.1.[37]

In a month-long transition from 8 to 30 April 2013, Microsoft discontinued two[see talk] of its own products in favor of Skype, including itsWindows Live Messenger instant messaging service, although Messenger continued to be available in mainland China until October 2014.[38][39]

On 11 November 2014, Microsoft announced that in 2015, its Lync product would be replaced bySkype for Business, combining the features of Lync and the consumer Skype software. Organizations that used it could switch their users between the default Skype for Business interface and the Lync interface.[40]

Post-acquisition

On 12 August 2013, Skype released the 4.10 update for Apple iPhone andiPad apps that allowed HD quality video for iPhone 5 and fourth-generation iPads.[41]

On 20 November 2014, Microsoft Office's team announced that a new chat powered by Skype would be implemented in their software, enabling users to chat with co-workers in the same document.[42]

On 15 September 2015, Skype announced the release of Mojis ("a brand new way to express yourself on Skype")—short video clips and GIFs featuring characters from films and TV shows that could be entered into conversations like emoticons. Skype worked withUniversal Studios,Disney Muppets,BBC and other studios to enhance the Mojis collection.[43] Later that year, Gurdeep Singh Pall, Corporate Vice President of Skype, announced that Microsoft had acquired the technology from Talko.[44]

In July 2016, Skype introduced an early Alpha version of a new Skype for Linux client, built withWebRTC technology, after several petitions asked Microsoft to continue development for Linux.[45][46] In September of that year, Skype updated their iOS app with new features, including an option to call contacts on Skype through Siri voice commands.[47] In October of that year, Microsoft launched Skype for Business for Mac.[48]

In February 2017, Microsoft announced plans to discontinue its Skype Wi-Fi service globally. The application was delisted, and the service itself became non-functional from 31 March 2017.[49][50] On 5 June 2017, Microsoft announced its plans to revamp Skype with similar features toSnapchat, allowing users to share temporary copies of their photos and video files.[51] In late June 2017, Microsoft rolled out their latest update for iOS, incorporating a revamped design and new third-party integrations, with platforms includingGfycat,YouTube, andUpWorthy.[52] It was not well-received, with numerous negative reviews and complaints that the new client broke existing functionality.[53] Skype later removed this "makeover". In December 2017, Microsoft added "Skype Interviews", a shared code editing system for those wishing to hold job interviews for programming roles.[54][55]

In April 2017, Microsoft eventually moved the service from apeer-to-peer to a central server based system, enabling cloud-based storage of text messages/pictures and temporary 30-day storage of videos/file attachments/voice messages/call recordings.[56] It also adjusted the user interfaces of apps to make text-based messaging more prominent than voice calling. Skype for Windows,[57] iOS,[58] Android,[59] Mac[60] and Linux[61] all received significant visual overhauls at this time. Users with legacy Skype accounts were able to retain their usernames, while new users are no longer able to manually choose a username. New user registrations associated with a Microsoft account were assigned a username with alive: prefix followed by an autogenerated alphanumeric string.[62]

In 2019, Skype was declared the sixth most-downloadedmobile app of the decade, from 2010 to 2019.[63]

In February 2025, Microsoft announced that Skype would be retired on 5 May 2025, to be replaced with the free version ofMicrosoft Teams.[18][19][64][65]

Features

Main article:List of Skype features

Registered users of Skype were identified by a unique Skype ID and may be listed in the Skype directory under a Skype username.[66] Skype allowed these registered users to communicate through both instant messaging and voice chat. Voice chat allowedtelephone calls between pairs of users and conference calling and used proprietary audiocodec. Skype's text chat client allowed group chats,emoticons, storing chat history, and editing of previous messages. Offline messages were implemented in a beta build of version 5 but removed after a few weeks without notification. The usual features familiar to instant messaging users—user profiles, online status indicators, and so on—are also included.

TheOnline Number, a.k.a. SkypeIn, service allowed Skype users to receive calls on their computers dialed by conventional phone subscribers to a local Skype phone number; local numbers are available for Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, the Dominican Republic, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Ireland, Japan, Mexico, Nepal, New Zealand, Poland, Romania, South Africa, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[67][68] A Skype user could have local numbers in any of these countries, with calls to the number charged at the same rate as calls to fixed lines in the country.

Skype supported conference calls, video chats, and screen sharing between 25 people at a time for free,[69] which then increased to 50 on 5 April 2019.[70]

Skype did not provide the ability to callemergency numbers, such as112 in Europe,911 in North America,999 in the UK or 100 in India and Nepal.[71] However, as of December 2012, there was limited support for emergency calls in the United Kingdom, Australia, Denmark, and Finland.[72] The U.S.Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has ruled that, for the purposes of section 255 of theTelecommunications Act, Skype was not an "interconnected VoIP provider".[73] As a result, the U.S.National Emergency Number Association recommended that all VoIP users have an analog line available as a backup.[74]

In 2019, Skype added an option to blur the background in a video chat interface using AI algorithms purely done using software, despite a depth-sensing camera not being present in most webcams.[75]

In 2023, Skype added the Bing AI chatbot to the platform for users who had access to the chatbot.[76]

Usage and traffic

This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(February 2020)
Usage and traffic
DateTotal user accounts
(millions)[77][78][79][80][81][82][83]
Active users, daily use
(millions)[84][85][86]
Skype to Skype minutes
(billions)[87]
SkypeOut minutes
(billions)
Revenue USD
(millions)
Q4 200574.710.8
Q1 200694.615.26.90.735
Q2 2006113.116.67.10.844
Q3 2006135.918.76.61.150
Q4 2006171.221.27.61.566
Q1 2007195.523.27.71.379
Q2 2007219.623.97.11.390
Q3 2007245.724.26.11.498
Q4 2007276.327.011.91.6115
Q1 2008309.331.314.21.7126
Q2 2008338.232.014.81.9136
Q3 200837033.716.02.2143
Q4 200840536.520.52.6145
Q1 200944342.223.62.9153
Q2 2009483?25.53.0170
Q3 2009521?27.73.1185
Q4 2009560?36.1??
Q1 2010??19012.8860
Q2 2010?????
Q3 2010?????
Q4 2010?????
Q1 2011?????
Q2 2011?????
Q3 2011663????
Q4 2011?????
Q1 2012?????
Q2 2012?????

Users may have had more than one account; it is not possible to count users, only accounts.

The volume of international traffic routed via Skype was significant. In 2009 it was considered the largest international voice carrier (by minutes of calls).[88]

YearInternational call market share
20052.9%[89]
20064.4%[89]
20088%[88]
200912%[87]
201013%[90]
201233%[91]
201336%[92]
201440%[93]

At the end of 2010, there were over 660 million worldwide users, with over 300 million estimated active each month as of August 2015.[94] At one point in February 2012, there were 34 million users concurrently online on Skype.[95]

In January 2011, after the release of video calling on the Skype client for iPhone, Skype reached a record 27 million simultaneous online users.[96] This record was broken with 29 million simultaneous online users on 21 February 2011[97] and again on 28 March 2011 with 30 million online users.[98] On 25 February 2012, Skype announced that it has over 32 million users for the first time ever.[99] By 5 March 2012, it had 36 million simultaneous online users,[100] and less than a year later, on 21 January 2013, Skype had more than 50 millionconcurrent users online.[101]In June 2012, Skype had surpassed 70 million downloads on Android.[102]

On 19 July 2012, Microsoft announced that Skype users had logged 115 billion minutes of calls in the quarter, up to 50% since the last quarter.[103]

On 15 January 2014, TeleGeography estimated that Skype-to-Skype international traffic has gone up to 36% in 2013 to 214 billion minutes.[104]

As of March 2020, Skype was used by 100 million people at least once a month and by 40 million people each day.[105]

At the end of March 2020 there was a 70% increase in the number of daily users from the previous month, due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[106] However, Skype also lost a large part of itsmarket share toZoom.[107]

Skype had continued to experience daily user decline since the pandemic, with the daily user count falling to 36 million in 2023, despite Microsoft's effort to promote Skype in their other services such asMicrosoft Outlook. The success ofMicrosoft Teams has been cited as causing businesses to abandon Skype, with Teams reaching 300 million active users in the 2nd quarter of 2023.[108]

Closure

Microsoft stated on its website Skype would be retired on 5 May 2025 to be replaced withMicrosoft Teams for more "modern communications". It also mentioned that users will have the option to sign into Teams on any device that supported Skype credentials, as well as giving users the option to export their Skype data if they do not wish to use Teams.[19] This closure was finalized on 5 May 2025.[109] Existing credit balance for outgoing phone calls can be used via a Skype Dial Pad web application, but no new credit can be purchased.[109][110]

System and software

Client applications and devices

Windows client

Skype 4.0 (released 2009)

Multiple different versions of Skype had been released for Windows since its conception. The original line of Skype applications continued from versions 1.0 through 4.0. It had offered a desktop-only program since 2003. Later, a mobile version was created for Windows Phones.

In 2012, Skype introduced a new version for Windows 8 similar to theWindows Phone version.[111] On 7 July 2015, Skype modified the application to direct Windows users to download the desktop version, but it was set to continue working on Windows RT until October 2016.[112] In November 2015, Skype introduced three new applications, called Messaging, Skype Video, and Phone, intended to provide an integrated Skype experience on Windows 10.[113][114] On 24 March 2016, Skype announced that the integrated applications did not satisfy most users' needs and announced that they and the desktop client would eventually be replaced with a new UWP application,[115] which was released as a preview version for the Windows 10 Anniversary Update and dubbed as the stable version with the release of the Windows 10 Creators Update.

The last version of Skype for Windows was Skype 12, which was based on the Universal Windows Platform and runs on various Windows 10-related systems, includingXbox One,Xbox Series X/S, Windows phones, andMicrosoft HoloLens. At the time of closure, Microsoft still offered the older Skype 8, which was Win32-based and ran on all systems fromWindows XP (which is otherwise unsupported by Microsoft) to the most recent release of Windows 10.[116]

Other desktop clients

Mobile clients

Skype formerly provided a client forfeature phones that ran onJ2ME,[117]Nokia X,Symbian,BlackBerry OS andBlackBerry 10 devices. In May 2009, a Version 3.0 was available onWindows Mobile 5 to6.1, and in September 2015, a Version 2.29[118] was available onWindows Phone 8.1; in 2016, Microsoft announced that this would stop working in early 2017 once Skype's transition from peer-to-peer to client-server was complete.[119]

Other platforms

  • TheNokia N800,N810, andN900 Internet tablets, which runMaemo
  • TheNokia N9, which runsMeeGo, comes with Skype voice calling and text messaging integrated; however, it lacks video calling.
  • Both theSony Mylo COM-1 and COM-2 models
  • ThePlayStation Portable Slim and Lite series, though the user needs to purchase a specially designed microphone peripheral. ThePSP-3000 has a built-in microphone, which allows communication without the Skype peripheral.[120] ThePSP Go has the ability to useBluetooth connections with the Skype application, in addition to its built-in microphone.[121] Skype forPlayStation Vita may be downloaded via the PlayStation Network in the U.S. It includes the capability to receive incoming calls with the application running in the background. Skype for PlayStation Portable and PlayStation Vita was discontinued on June 22, 2016.[122]
  • TheSamsung Smart TV had a Skype app, which could be downloaded for free.[123] It used the built-in camera and microphone for the newer models. Alternatively, a separate mountable Skype camera with built-in speakers and microphones is available to purchase for older models.[124] This functionality has now been disabled, along with any other "TV Based" Skype clients.
  • Some devices were made to work with Skype by talking to a desktop Skype client or by embedding Skype software into the device. These were usually either tethered to a PC or had a built-inWi-Fi client to allow calling from Wi-Fi hotspots, like theNetgear SPH101 Skype Wi-Fi Phone, theSMC WSKP100 Skype Wi-Fi Phone, theBelkin F1PP000GN-SK Wi-Fi Skype Phone, thePanasonic KX-WP1050 Wi-Fi Phone for Skype Executive Travel Set, theIPEVO So-20 Wi-Fi Phone for Skype, and theLinksys CIT200 Wi-Fi Phone.
  • 3G Skypephone, created in collaboration between Skype and3 in 2007[125]

Third-party licensing

Third-party developers, such asTruphone,Nimbuzz, andFring, previously allowed Skype to run in parallel with several other competing VoIP/IM networks (Truphone and Nimbuzz provide TruphoneOut and NimbuzzOut as a competing paid service) in any Symbian or Java environment. Nimbuzz made Skype available toBlackBerry users, and Fring provided mobile video calling over Skype as well as support for the Android platform. Skype disabled access to Skype by Fring users in July 2010.[126] Nimbuzz discontinued support of Skype on request in October 2010.[127]

Before and during the Microsoft acquisition, Skype withdrew licensing from several third parties producing software and hardware compatible with Skype. The Skype forAsterisk product fromDigium was withdrawn as "no longer available for sale".[128] TheSenao SN358+ long-range (10–15 km) cordless phone was discontinued due to loss of licenses to participate in the Skype network as peers. In combination, these two products made it possible to create roaming cordless mesh networks with a robust handoff.

Technology

Protocol

Main article:Skype protocol

Skype used aproprietary Internet telephony (VoIP) network called theSkype protocol. The protocol had not been made publicly available by Skype, and official applications using the protocol were also proprietary. Part of the Skype technology relied on the Global Index P2P protocol belonging to the Joltid Ltd. corporation. The main difference between Skype and standard VoIP clients was that Skype operated on apeer-to-peer model (originally based on theKazaa software[129]), rather than the more usualclient-server model (note that the very popularSession Initiation Protocol (SIP) model of VoIP is also peer-to-peer, but implementation generally requires registration with a server, as did Skype).

On 20 June 2014, Microsoft announced the deprecation of the old Skype protocol. Within several months from this date, in order to continue using Skype services, Skype users would have to update to Skype applications released in 2014. The new Skype protocol,Microsoft Notification Protocol 24, was released. The deprecation became effective in the second week of August 2014. Transferred files were saved on central servers after this change.

As far as networking stack support is concerned, Skype only supported theIPv4 protocol. It lacked support for the next-generation Internet Protocol,IPv6.[130]Skype for Business, however, includes support for IPv6 addresses, along with continued support of IPv4.[131]

Protocol detection and control

Many networking and security companies have claimed to detect and control Skype's protocol for enterprise and carrier applications. While the specific detection methods used by these companies were often private,Pearson's chi-squared test andnaive Bayes classification were two approaches that were published in 2008.[132] Combining statistical measurements of payload properties (such as byte frequencies and initial byte sequences) as well as flow properties (like packet sizes and packet directions) had also shown to be an effective method for identifying Skype's TCP- and UDP-based protocols.[133]

Audio codecs

Skype 2.x usedG.729, Skype 3.2 introducedSVOPC, and Skype 4.0 added a Skype-created codec calledSILK, intended to be "lightweight and embeddable".[134] Additionally, Skype had releasedOpus as afree codec, which integrates the SILK codec principles for voice transmission with theCELT codec principles for higher-quality audio transmissions, such as live music performances. Opus was submitted to theInternet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in September 2010.[135] Since then, it has been standardized as RFC 6716.[136]

Video codecs

VP7 was used for versions prior to Skype 5.5.[137][138][139][140][141]

As of version 7.0,H.264 was used for both group and one-on-one video chat, atstandard definition,720p, and1080phigh-definition.[142][143]

Skype Qik

Main article:Skype Qik

Skype acquired the video service Qik in 2011. After shutting down Qik in April 2014, Skype relaunched the service asSkype Qik on 14 October 2014. Although Qik offered video conferencing and Internet streaming, the new service focused on mobile video messaging between individuals and groups.[144]

Hyperlink format

Skype usedURIs asskype:USER?call for a call.[145]

Security and privacy

Main article:Skype security

Skype was claimed initially to be asecure communication, with one of its early web pages stating "highly secure with end-to-end encryption".[146] Security services were invisible to the user, and encryption could not be disabled. Skype claimed to use publicly documented, widely trusted encryption techniques for Skype-to-Skype communication:RSA for key negotiation and theAdvanced Encryption Standard to encrypt conversations.[147] However, it is impossible to verify that these algorithms are used correctly, completely, and at all times, as there is no public review possible without a protocol specification or the program's source code. Skype provided an uncontrolled registration system for users with no proof of identity. Instead, users might choose ascreen name that does not have to relate to their real-life identity in any way; a name chosen could also be an impersonation attempt, where the user claims to be someone else for fraudulent purposes. A third-party paper analyzing the security and methodology of Skype was presented atBlack Hat Europe 2006. It analyzed Skype and found a number of security issues with the then-current security model.[148]

PRISM: aclandestinesurveillance program under which theNSA collects user data from companies likeSkype and Facebook[149]

Skype incorporated some features that tended to hide its traffic, but it was not specifically designed to thwarttraffic analysis and therefore did not provideanonymous communication. Some researchers had been able towatermark the traffic so that it was identifiable even after passing through ananonymizing network.[150]

In an interview, Kurt Sauer, the Chief Security Officer of Skype, said, "We provide a safe communication option. I will not tell you whether we can listen or not."[151] This did not deny the fact that the U.S.National Security Agency (NSA) monitored Skype conversations. Skype's client used an undocumented and proprietary protocol. TheFree Software Foundation (FSF) was concerned about user privacy issues arising from using proprietary software and protocols and had made a replacement for Skype one of their high-priority projects.[152] Security researchers Biondi and Desclaux had speculated that Skype might have aback door, since Skype sent traffic even when it was turned off and because Skype had taken extreme measures to obfuscate the program's traffic and functioning.[153] Several media sources reported that at a meeting about the "Lawful interception of IP based services" held on 25 June 2008, high-ranking unnamed officials at the Austrian interior ministry said that they could listen in on Skype conversations without problems. The Austrian public broadcasting serviceORF, citing minutes from the meeting, reported that "the Austrian police are able to listen in on Skype connections". Skype declined to comment on the reports.[154][155] One easily demonstrated method of monitoring was to set up two computers with the same Skype user ID and password. When a message was typed or a call was received on one computer, the second computer duplicated the audio and text. This required knowledge of the user ID and password.

The United StatesFederal Communications Commission (FCC) has interpreted theCommunications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) as requiring digital phone networks to allowwiretapping if authorized by an FBI warrant, in the same way as other phone services. In February 2009, Skype said that, not being a telephone company owning phone lines, it is exempt from CALEA and similar laws, which regulate US phone companies, and it is not clear whether Skype could support wiretapping even if it wanted to.[156] According to theACLU, the Act is inconsistent with the original intent of theFourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution;[157] more recently, the ACLU has expressed concern that the FCC interpretation of the Act is incorrect.[158][159] It has been suggested that Microsoft made changes to Skype's infrastructure to ease various wiretapping requirements;[160] however, Skype denies the claims.[161]

Sometime before Skype was sold in 2009, the company had startedProject Chess, a program to explore legal and technical ways to easily share calls with intelligence agencies and law enforcement.[162]

On 20 February 2009, the European Union'sEurojust agency announced that the Italian Desk at Eurojust would "play a key role in the coordination and cooperation of the investigations on the use of internet telephony systems (VoIP), such as 'Skype'. [...] The purpose of Eurojust's coordination role is to overcome the technical and judicial obstacles to the interception of internet telephony systems, taking into account the various data protection rules and civil rights."[163]

In November 2010, a flaw was disclosed to Skype that showed howcomputer crackers could secretly track any user's IP address.[164] Due to Skype'speer-to-peer nature, this was a difficult issue to address, but this bug was eventually remedied in a 2016 update.[165]

In 2012, Skype introduced automatic updates to better protect users from security risks, but received some challenge from users of the Mac product, as the updates cannot be disabled from version 5.6 on,[166] both on Mac OS and Windows versions, although in the latter, and only from version 5.9 on, automatic updating can be turned off in certain cases.[167]

According to a 2012Washington Post article, Skype "has expanded its cooperation with law enforcement authorities to make online chats and other user information available to police"; the article additionally mentions that Skype made changes to allow authorities access to addresses and credit card numbers.[168]

In November 2012, Skype was reported to have handed over user data of a pro-WikiLeaks activist toDallas, Texas-based private security company iSIGHT Partners without a warrant or court order. The alleged handover would be a breach of Skype's privacy policy. Skype responded with a statement that it launched an internal investigation to probe the breach of userdata privacy.[169]

On 13 November 2012, a Russian user published a flaw in Skype's security that allowed any person to take over a Skype account knowing only the victim's email by following seven steps.[170][171] This vulnerability was claimed to exist for months and existed for more than 12 hours after being published widely.

On 14 May 2013, it was documented that a URL sent via a Skype instant messaging session was usurped by the Skype service and subsequently used in aHTTP HEAD query originating from anIP address registered to Microsoft in Redmond (the IP address used was 65.52.100.214). The Microsoft query used the full URL supplied in the IM conversation and was generated by a previously undocumented security service.[172] Security experts speculate that the action was triggered by a technology similar to Microsoft's SmartScreen Filter used in its browsers.[173]

The2013 mass surveillance disclosures revealed that agencies such as the NSA and theFBI have the ability to eavesdrop on Skype, including the monitoring and storage of text and video calls and file transfers.[174][175][176] ThePRISM surveillance program, which requiresFISA court authorization, reportedly has allowed the NSA unfettered access to its data center supernodes. According to the leaked documents, integration work began in November 2010, but it was not until February 2011 that the company was served with a directive to comply signed by the attorney general,[174] with NSA documents showing that collection began on 31 March 2011.[177]

On 10 November 2014, Skype scored 1 out of 7 points on theElectronic Frontier Foundation's secure messaging scorecard. Skype received a point for encryption during transit but lost points because communications are not encrypted with a key the provider does not have access to (i.e., the communications are notend-to-end encrypted), users cannot verify contacts' identities, past messages are not secure if the encryption keys are stolen (i.e., the service does not provideforward secrecy), the code is not open to independent review (i.e., not available to merely view, nor under afree-software license), the security design is not properly documented, and there has not been a recent independent security audit.[178][179][180]AIM,BlackBerry Messenger,Ebuddy XMS,Hushmail,Kik Messenger,Viber, andYahoo Messenger also scored 1 out of 7 points.[178]

As of August 2018, Skype now supported end-to-end encryption across all platforms.[181]

Cybercrime on application

Cybersex trafficking had occurred on Skype[182][183][184][185] and othervideoconferencing applications.[186] According to theAustralian Federal Police, overseas pedophiles were directingchild sex abuse using its live streaming services.[187][185]

Service in the People's Republic of China

This article'sfactual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(January 2012)

Since September 2007, users in China trying to download the Skype software client had been redirected to the site ofTOM Online, a joint venture between a Chinese wireless operator and Skype, from which a modified Chinese version could be downloaded.[188] The TOM client participated in China's system ofInternet censorship, monitoring text messages between Skype users in China as well as messages exchanged with users outside the country.[189][190] Niklas Zennström, then chief executive of Skype, told reporters that TOM "had implemented a text filter, which is what everyone else in that market is doing. Those are the regulations." He also stated, "One thing that's certain is that those things are in no way jeopardising the privacy or the security of any of the users."[191]

In October 2008, it was reported that TOM had been saving the full message contents of some Skype text conversations on its servers, apparently focusing on conversations containing political issues such asTibet,Falun Gong,Taiwan independence, and theChinese Communist Party. The saved messages containpersonally identifiable information about the message senders and recipients, including IP addresses, usernames, landline phone numbers, and the entire content of the text messages, including the time and date of each message. Information about Skype users outside China who were communicating with a TOM-Skype user was also saved. A server misconfiguration made these log files accessible to the public for a time.[190][192][193]

Research on the TOM-Skype venture has revealed information about blacklisted keyword checks, allowing censorship and surveillance of its users. The partnership had received much criticism for the latter. Microsoft remained unavailable for comment on the issue.[194]

According to reports from the advocacy group Great Fire, Microsoft had modified censorship restrictions and ensured encryption of all user information.[194] Furthermore, Microsoft partnered with Guangming Founder (GMF) in China.[195]

All attempts to visit the official Skype web page from mainland China redirected the user to skype.gmw.cn. The Linux version of Skype was unavailable.[citation needed]

Localization

Skype came bundled with the following locales and languages: Arabic, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Traditional and Simplified), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Nepali, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazilian and European), Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese.

As the Windows desktop program offered users the option of creating new language files, at least 80 other (full or partial) localizations were also available for many languages.[196]

Customer service

In January 2010, Skype rescinded its policy of seizing funds in Skype accounts that have been inactive (no paid call) for 180 days. This was in settlement of aclass-action lawsuit.[197] The company also paid up to US$4 to persons who opted into the action.

Skype provided support through their web support portal, support community, @skypesupport onTwitter, and Skype Facebook page. Direct contact via email and live chat was available through their web support portal. Chat Support was a premium feature available to Skype Premium and some other paid users.

Skype's refund policy stated that they would provide refunds in full if customers had used less than €1 of their Skype Credit. "Upon a duly submitted request, Skype will refund you on a pro-rata basis for the unused period of a Product."

Skype had come under some criticism from users for the inability to completely close accounts. Users not wanting to continue using Skype could make their account inactive by deleting all personal information, except for the username.[198]

Due to an outage on 21 September 2015 that affected several users in New Zealand, Australia, and other countries, Skype decided to compensate their customers with 20 minutes of free calls to over 60 landline and 8 mobile phone destinations.[199]

Educational use

Although Skype was a commercial product, it was reported in 2011 that its non-paid version was being used with increasing frequency among teachers, schools, and charities interested in global education projects.[200] A popular use case was to facilitate language learning through conversations that alternate between each participant's native language.[201][202][203][204]

The video conferencing aspect of the software had been praised for its ability to connect students who speak different languages, facilitate virtual field trips, and engage directly with experts.[205][206]

Skype in the classroom was another free-of-charge tool that Skype had set up on its website, designed to encourage teachers to make their classrooms more interactive, and collaborate with other teachers around the world. There were various Skype lessons in which students could participate. Teachers could also use a search tool and find experts in a particular field.[207] The educational programSkype a Scientist, set up by biologistSarah McAnulty in 2017, had in two years connected 14,312 classrooms with over 7,000 volunteer scientists.[208]

However, Skype was not adopted universally; some educational institutions in the United States and Europe were blocking the application from their networks.[209][210]

See also

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