The National - News

Abu Dhabi group DarkMatter unveils its secure phone

- JOHN EVERINGTON

Abu Dhabi cybersecur­ity company DarkMatter unveiled its flagship secure Katim Android phone at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona yesterday, the latest in what it describes as its “holistic” approach to threats that target personal devices.

First announced last February, the device has already begun shipping to UAE customers, DarkMatter chief executive Faisal Al Bannai told

The National. The company’s initial run of “a few thousand” handsets – which are sold directly to government and corporate clients and are not available via traditiona­l retail channels – have already sold out.

“Our first customer base that had the initial batch [of phones] is UAE-based, and we’ve been talking to a number of other customers,” said Mr Al Bannai.

“The interest we’ve got is from GCC and outside from the Far East and Europe.” He declined to give further details.

Cyber crimes cost global businesses between $445 billion to $600bn per year, up from between $345bn to 445bn in 2014, according to research published last month by cybersecur­ity company McAfee and US think tank the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

As illegal activities go, cyber crime’s impact trails only government corruption and narcotics traffickin­g in its economic impact, the research estimated.

The Katim phone forms a part of DarkMatter’s Katim cybersecur­ity suite, first unveiled at last year’s MWC.

The 5.2-inch Katim smartphone uses a hardened version of the Android operating system, whose features includes a full software stack check when the device is booted, a data-wipe function in case of a serious security breach, and shield mode to disable recording functions.

Mr Al Bannai stressed that a secure Android device alone could not protect corporatio­ns and government­s from cyber attacks.

“If we only had to rely on [Android security updates] then everyone in this hall would be okay from a security point of view,” he said, referring to other mobile manufactur­ers showcasing their latest handsets.

“You need to look at your systems, your network, your apps, the process by which it was implemente­d, all of it together. “

New mobile malware grew by 60 per cent globally yearon-year in the third quarter of last year, according to McAfee, fuelled by a big increase in Android screen-locking ransomware.

Mr Al Bannai said that major online breaches worldwide had increased “exponentia­lly” over the past 48 months, compared with the previous period of the same length, even as spending on cyber security continues to rise.

“The sophistica­tion of criminals or government­s is increasing, but it’s also because customers are trying to find a silver bullet to solve their security issues,” he said.

“You can’t solve it unless you have a holistic approach to security.”

DarkMatter also announced the availabili­ty of its Katim email applicatio­n, enabling end-to-end encrypted communicat­ion between Katim users, with external users able to participat­e via secure web access.

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