
	
	January 15, 2014
	from RT 
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	Image from blackphone.ch
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	Silent Circle - an encryption firm that has made it its mission to defy NSA 
	snooping - is releasing what it says will be the world’s most secure smartphone.
	
		
		"What we are trying to do is to make a smartphone whose whole purpose is to protect users’ privacy," said Phil 
		Zimmerman, a renowned cryptographer and one of Silent Circle’s founders.
	
	
	Makers say that both the hardware and software 
	of the device, dubbed 
	
	the Blackphone, has been specially modified, and all 
	communication services come pre-installed, meaning the handset has "no hooks 
	to carriers or vendors."
	
	The company has partnered with 
	
	Geeksphone, a niche Spanish phone 
	manufacturer that uses the Android platform for its mobile devices.
	
	A darkened photo on the 
	Blackphone website is the only hint as to how the 
	device will look, and no specifications have been announced, though the 
	producers say the phone will be manufactured in security-conscious 
	Switzerland.
	
	Silent Circle was one of the biggest providers of encrypted email in the 
	world in the past several years, but pre-emptively shut down its services in 
	August last year ahead of an expected broad surveillance request by the FBI.
	
	The company was following the example of Lavabit, which offered similar 
	services, until it was served with orders from the Feds to turn over its 
	encryption keys. 
	
	 
	
	The US authorities had suspected that fugitive National 
	Security Agency whistleblower 
	
	Edward Snowden may have been using the service 
	prior to his leaks last summer.
	
	The two companies, who style themselves after the Rebel Alliance who fought 
	the Death Star in Star Wars, subsequently joined forces to develop
	
	Dark 
	Mail, a new purportedly super-secure email service that is expected to be 
	unveiled later this year.
	
	The Blackphone is not the first product on the market to aim for the 
	increasingly popular privacy niche, with a German company offering a device 
	called the 
	
	Cryptophone, and another handset called 
	
	Quasar IV. But it failed 
	to gather enough money to go into production in a Kickstarter campaign three 
	months ago.
	
	And while it is obvious that these phones will offer a superior level of 
	protection when it comes to being tracked by business rivals or family 
	members, it is not clear whether they are sufficient to escape the long 
	reach of the NSA.
	
	Documents revealed by Edward Snowden show that not only has the agency 
	cracked all the popular encryption codes, but that it also resorts to 
	implanting physical listening devices in equipment, as well as using other 
	independent interception techniques.
	
	The security of communication also depends not only on what device is used 
	by the owner of the super-secure phone, but also, the location of the device 
	he is communicating with.
	
	Geeksphone, which was founded by a 16-year old in 2009, also has a mixed 
	reputation in the business, with big announcements followed by disappointing 
	releases, or products that have failed to make it to the market altogether.
	
	Nonetheless, the manufacturer says it will be taking first orders for the 
	Blackphone later this year.