NSA develops military-grade smartphone
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥Xt=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥XIf you were ever wondering why the BlackBerry wasn’t secure enough for France, you might want to take a look at the Sectéra Edge, the smartphone that’s being developed for the NSA and soldiers in the field. Some of the security features include:
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥Xt=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥X* Secure wireless access to the SIPRNET and NIPRNET
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥X* DoD PKI enabled Common Access Card (CAC) support
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥X* Supports DoD 8100.2 requirements
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥X* Type 1 encrypted storage of classified data
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥X* Can be used inside closed areas with “SCIF-Friendly” mode
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥Xt=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥XOn top of that, this thing was built extra-rugged for combat conditions, as seen in their demo video. The Edge works on CDMA, GSM and Wi-Fi, and also plays nice with S/MIME BlackBerry users. Apparently the NSA has ordered up $300-million-worth of these things over the next five years, so if you’re in the U.S. Army, keep your eyes peeled.
t=Óvû^bb818.com{ËçH¥X附件:
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