The company said it received the endorsement from the NSA's
National Information Assurance Partnership, or NIAP, which
reviews commercial technology products to see if they meet
enhanced security standards for government use.
NIAP has also endorsed tools from BlackBerry rivals that
outplayed BlackBerry in consumer smartphones, including Apple
Inc <AAPL.O> and Samsung Electronics <005930.KS>.
The fear that eavesdroppers are listening in to government
communications has risen sharply in recent years, with an
unencrypted mobile phone call between a senior U.S. State
Department officer and the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine
intercepted and leaked online in early 2014.
The tools are based on technology from Secusmart, which
BlackBerry acquired in 2014 after the German startup won a
contract to lock down Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone in
the wake of claims by a former U.S. intelligence contractor that
it was tapped by the NSA.
German prosecutors in 2015 dropped an inquiry into claims that
Merkel's phone was bugged, saying they had not found enough
evidence to continue the probe.
BlackBerry said its encrypted voice and text messaging products
are used by government agencies in 20 countries in Europe, Latin
America, southeast Asia and Africa.
Germany is its biggest government customer.
(Reporting by Alastair Sharp; Editing by Jim Finkle and Leslie
Adler)
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