Synaptics has announced a new ultra-small form factor USB module that enables Natural IDâ„¢ secure fingerprint authentication on any notebook PC.
Sirin Labs officially launched its super ultra secure Android smartphone at an event in London today, billed as 'the world’s first truly smart phone' - and will set you back a mere £10,000 ($16,000).
Back in March of this year, we reported how BlackBerry Secure Work Space users should not upgrade to iOS 9.3 due to compatibility issues.
The news that BlackBerry's global decryption key has been in the hands of the RCMP since 2010 raised it's ugly head last week, prompting BlackBerry CEO John Chen to (once again) take to the BlackBerry blog.
Samsung today announced that Samsung KNOX 2.6, Samsung’s built in defense grade security, received the most “Strong†ratings of any mobile security platform in the report “Mobile Device Security: A Comparison of Platforms†from Gartner
WhatsApp has rolled out full end-to-end encryption for all modes of communication, so every call you make, every message, photo, video, file, and voice message you send, is end-to-end encrypted by default, including group chats.
The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) has officially ended legal action against Apple in the month-long encryption feud between the the tech giant and the FBI.
Apple are expected to officially release iOS 9.3 next week. iOS 9.3 is currently in it's seventh beta and the official release will not be compatible with BlackBerry Secure Work Space at the time of it's release.
Yesterday, we reported how a Dutch law enforcement agency claims it can access PGP-encrypted BlackBerry data.
Last month, BlackBerry announced the new voice encryption solution SecuSUITE for Enterprise that protects mobile calls with a maximum level of security and is a multi-OS offering to be used on iOS, Android and BlackBerry 10.
The debate about whether law enforcement should possess the ability to access encrypted communications has once again risen to the surface.
BlackBerry chief operating officer Marty Beard told the FedTalks government information technology summit in the United States that BlackBerry smartphones have lawful interception capabilities for government surveillance purposes