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RIM clarifies three misperceptions about BlackBerry

RIM clarifies three misperceptions about BlackBerry

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 27 Aug 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

RIM proposes establishing an industry forum to work with Government of India on encryption issues and stresses the need to ‘unequivocally clarify’ three misperceptions, in a statement Thursday. But RIM isn't clarifying the difference between BES, BBM and BIS, says one analyst

Mark Tauschek, research director at Info-Tech Research Group Ltd., said there has been a need for RIM to clarify their message. 

There is a widely-held belief that there was some capitulation on RIM’s part and that the company was going to do something different for certain governments than they normally do in common business practice, he said.

As for RIM’s offer to form an industry forum, Tauschek said it is “a good proposal” and a way to get the issues laid out on the table and bring in other interested parties so “it’s clear to everyone.”

The approach is about educating government, he said. And RIM has been doing “some of this education on their own independently with individual governments” for some time, he said.

“The only real stumbling block right now is that they can’t accommodate when it comes to BES,” said Tauschek. “They developed it for a reason – to be secure. So even if they wanted to, they couldn’t break their own encryption mechanism within the BES environment,” he said.

“This is a reasonable offer to India,” said Ken Dulaney, vice-president and distinguished analyst at Gartner Research, in an e-mail interview.

But while RIM’s descriptions of BES are accurate, the company fails to cite the differences between BES, BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) and BlackBerry Internet Service (BIS) in its statement, said Dulaney.

“BBM is the real issue and it’s based on a global key,” he said.

Governments can access BBM and BIS information through carriers, as BBM is not encrypted and BIS traffic is managed to some extent at the carrier level, said Tauschek. "BIS and BBM are what they are and just like any other traffic crossing a carrier's network, [carriers] can provide access to that," he said.  

“BES is a different thing entirely … even if RIM wanted to capitulate and give access to BES traffic, they can’t because it’s a one-to-one encryption relationship,” said Tauschek.

And any strongly encrypted VPN offers “the same sort of stumbling block for any government that wants to have full visibility into all of the traffic crossing the network," said Tauschek.

"Certificates for VPNs, if it is 256-bit encrypted, are not the property of the government or the carrier – it's the property of the organization that has the VPN concentrator or server," he said. 
 
While RIM is the target right now, “we will see more of this from other companies and other technologies with relation to how do you provide government access to that data that is strongly encrypted with a certificate that you don’t own,” said Tauschek. 

Follow me on Twitter @jenniferkavur.










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Tags: RIM, India, BlackBerry












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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.
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