Originally Posted by
dvarnai now the only problem is, you have no idea how phone calls work lulz :) you cant encrypt your phone calls. also agencies have their own servers set up at the datacenter of ISPs. they dont even need your phone to tap it. even with secusmart. your normal phone calls wont be encrypted as normal phones wouldnt be able to decrypt it without using secusmart themselves. you are a high profile ***** at best. btw i said consumers. becoming a big player, a turnaround would require gaining market share back. a few thousand government devices wont help that. secusmart also wont help the slightest if you use cloud storage hosted by others, use facebook etc etc. secusmart is a seperate infrastructure thats secure as long as you are reaching hosts that are part of that infrastructure... if blackberry was so secure, why would they need a seperate infrastructure? because blackberry can only be as secure as much as they are involved in transmitting data... once data left your device no matter how secure your device is if other parties are not secure.
edit: point is, consumers wont ever be protected as long as they are using the ISP infrastructure and public cloud services and blackberry will never be a big player as long as they are only focusing on enterprise. enterprises can be secured using their own infrastructure private encrypted voice channels, but the consumers wont be protected. an encrypted network wont be safe if everyone has access to it unless everyone has a seperate private key for every single contact and the same applies to other parties too. but thats a ***** to implement
Edit2: if only phones would be fast enough to generate a private key and a public key in less than a second then you could have a new key generated for every single initiated conversation and implementation would likely become less of a *****