Secusmart puts its BlackBerry encryption chip to work on the desktop

At around 2,000 (US$2800) each, the secure smartphones that SecuSmart showed at Cebit last year were out of reach of many businessesalthough three governments have since bought them to secure mobile phone calls between senior officials, according to CEO Hans-Christoph Quelle. Now the company has developed a less expensive and more flexible system intended for the enterprise, and has extended the reach of its mobile system to secure VOIP calls on desktop phones.

The SecuSuite smartphone security system is built on the Balance feature of BlackBerry OS 10, which separates business and personal apps and data into two partitions. SecuSmart uses special SD cards containing a cryptographic engine and a keystore to further secure the data in the business partition, and to encrypt voice and data communications made from that partition.

Its new fixed-line product relies on the same SD cards, central key infrastructure and SIP servers used by the smartphone system, but now works with modified desktop VOIP phones from Tiptel and Snom. The phones have a slot for the SD card encryption engine, and additional software that manages the card, and indicates when a call is secured. They will allow government officials to place secure VOIP calls between premises that are not themselves secure.

SecuSmart and its partners have not yet set a price for the new desktop phones. Quelle said it will be less than the price of a BlackBerry Z10 equipped with the secure SD card, but not hugely so.

While SecuSuite is gaining traction in the government market, it can seem overengineered and overpriced to enterprises that only want to encrypt voice traffic because they already have MDM (mobile device management) tools to adequately secure their email and data traffic, Quelle said. Another obstacle, he said, is that businesses are reluctant to replace their and their employees existing smartphones with BlackBerry devices, and want software that works on all platforms.

Its reasonable to assume that enterprises concerned about voice encryption are already securing the platform and the data, and all thats needed is an end-to-end encryption system to prevent eavesdropping on calls, he said. Thats what prompted the company to work with network operator Vodafone Germany on the Secure Call app for Android phones. The app will be ready before the end of the year, he said, echoing the timetable Vodafone gave when it announced the app. Vodafone plans to charge around 10 a month to use Secure Call.

Vodafone offers an existing voice encryption service, also developed by SecuSmart, as part of its Secure SIM offering. To use it, all callers have to have a SIM from Vodafone Germany. Thats a problem for large companies that wish to dual-source services for security of supply or to obtain competitive prices, said Quelle, and its also a challenge for multinationals with employees in other countries.

The new app does all the encryption and key management in software, and is not tied to either an SD card or to the SIM card. That frees up users to choose other operatorsand also frees up SecuSmart. For now, said Quelle, Vodafone has exclusive rights to the app in Germany, but in other countries SecuSmart is free to work with other distributors, operators or not.

The worlds secret services may be about to find the massive interception of phone calls getting a lot harder.

Peter Sayer covers open source software, European intellectual property legislation and general technology breaking news. More by Peter Sayer

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Secusmart puts its BlackBerry encryption chip to work on the desktop

CyanogenMod receiving Linux New Media Award 2014 (Best Open Source Software App for Android) – Video


CyanogenMod receiving Linux New Media Award 2014 (Best Open Source Software App for Android)
On 13.03.2014 CyanogenMod received the Linux New Media Award 2014 for "Best Open Source Software App for Android" Representing the CyanogenMod Team were Abhi...

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CyanogenMod receiving Linux New Media Award 2014 (Best Open Source Software App for Android) - Video

Wearable tech, Julian Assange and Grumpy Cat: Newsrooms goes inside the trends of SXSW – Video


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Wikileaks candidate out of WA Senate poll

Wikileaks candidate out of WA Senate poll

The Wikileaks Party candidate endorsed for WA's re-run Senate election has pulled out of the race, citing "unforeseen personal reasons".

Gerry Georgatos, who ran in the September poll, was announced as the lead candidate in the April 5 poll after party leader Julian Assange was not allowed to run because he had not spent enough time in WA in the past six years.

But one hour before the close of nominations on Thursday, Mr Georgatos withdrew from the race.

"There arrive events in people's lives that require their commitment, and it is my duty to honour such a commitment," he said.

"However, I will remain with the WikiLeaks Party, and I will campaign for them, for their imperatives, and I support these imperatives through the presence of the WA senate candidates."

The new lead candidate is now Tibor Meszaros, the general manager and producer of community television station West TV.

Journalist Lucy Nicol is running in second place.

Mr Georgatos, a social justice campaigner, caused controversy during the last poll when he directed preferences to The Nationals rather than the Greens, despite Senator Scott Ludlam's support for Wikileaks and Julian Assange.

Mr Georgatos said Wikileaks came close to being elected in the last poll.

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Wikileaks candidate out of WA Senate poll

WA Wikileaks candidate pulls out of Senate race

ABC Gerry Georgatos has withdrawn from the Senate election days after replacing Julian Assange.

There has been another change to the Wikileaks Party team for the WA Senate election after Julian Assange was ruled out and the endorsed candidate pulled out.

This week, Gerry Georgatos was announced as the lead candidate after Mr Assange was not allowed to run.

But following a media story which detailed Mr Georgatos' belief convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby was innocent of trying to take cannabis into Bali in 2004, he withdrew from the race.

He says he decided to pull out for "personal reasons" and denies it has anything to do with the fact he believes Corby is innocent.

Mr Georgatos also says the party has backed his stance.

Everyone on the Wikileaks national council has been supportive of me on that [support of Schapelle Corby's innocence], Mr Georgatos said.

He said he would have preferred that Julian Assange, the original choice, be the lead candidate but the party was recently told by the AEC that he was ineligible to run.

Mr Georgatos, a long time social justice campaigner, courted controversy when he ran for the Senate last year and decided the WA Wikileaks branch would go it alone on preferences.

He directed preferences to the Nationals rather than the Greens despite Senator Scott Ludlams strong support for Wikileaks and Julian Assange.

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WA Wikileaks candidate pulls out of Senate race

Schapelle Corby conspiracy theorist withdraws as WikiLeaks candidate in WA Senate election

Gerry Georgatos has withdrawn as the WikiLeaks candidate for the WA Senate.

A Schapelle Corby conspiracy theorist has withdrawn his candidacy for the WikiLeaks Party at the West Australian Senate election.

In a statement released on Monday morning, Gerry Georgatos said he had contacted the Australian Electoral Commission to remove himself from the nominations, citing ''unforseen personal reasons''.

He said he would remain with the WikiLeaks Party and campaign in the lead-up to the Senate election.

Mr Georgatos was WikiLeaks' WA candidate at the botched Senate election in September drawing just less than 10,000 or 0.75 per cent of the vote but he had announced he would step aside for Mr Assange, who he said would need just 3000 more primary votes to get elected.

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Mr Georgatos was endorsed by the WikiLeaks national council on Tuesday night after the party was notified by the Australian Electoral Commission that Mr Assange was not eligible to contest in WA as he had not spent enough time in the state in past six years.

Mr Assange remains in diplomatic asylum inside the Ecuadorian embassy in London.

Mr Georgatos, a university researcher and journalist, wrote a series of articles in January for independent news website, The Stringer, claiming Australian officials ''know without doubt'' that Schapelle Corby is innocent.

The article went on to claim that she was used as a drug mule by corrupt officials and the Australian government considered brokering a ''tit-for-tat'' deal in which Indonesian children in Australian prisons would be ''swapped'' for Ms Corby.

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Schapelle Corby conspiracy theorist withdraws as WikiLeaks candidate in WA Senate election