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RIM Agrees To Hand Over Its Encryption Keys To India

An anonymous reader writes "BlackBerry maker Research in Motion's (RIM) four-year standoff with the Indian government over providing encryption keys for its secure corporate emails and popular messenger services is finally set to end. RIM recently demonstrated a solution that can intercept messages and emails exchanged between BlackBerry handsets, and make these encrypted communications available in a readable format to Indian security agencies. An amicable solution over the monitoring issue is important for the Canadian smartphone maker since India is one of the few bright spots for the company that has been battling falling sales in its primary markets of the US and Europe. In India, RIM has tripled its customer base close to 5 million over the last two years,"

4 of 164 comments (clear)

  1. Nothing like giving in... by theNAM666 · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... to a democratically elected government...

    1. Re:Nothing like giving in... by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sarchasm. The gap between you and the joke.

      Sargasm. When your joke makes you laugh a little too hard.

  2. It's OK... by tlambert · · Score: 4, Funny

    Half the country has been unable to recharge their Blackberries for two days in a row anyway.

  3. Re:But this is India we are talking about by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Funny

    Encryption is crackable

    True, encryption _CAN_ be cracked, by hook or by crook

    Are you talking about this form of cracking? Because, with a sufficiently long secret key, it is proven impossible to break.

    I like using long period PRNGs to make an effective one-time pad. How you initialize the PRNG is your key.