trident2010
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BlackBerry gives in, to set up server in India
Canada-based Research in Motion (RIM), the maker of BlackBerry, on Monday provided certain proposals for lawful access to its services by India's security agencies, sources in the Home Ministry said.
The proposals would be operationalised immediately and the company would set up a server in India, the sources added.
At a high-level meeting chaired by Home Secretary G.K. Pillai, it was decided that the Department of Telecommunication (DoT) would study the feasibility of all such services being provided through the server located only in India.
The Ministry, in a release, said it would review security issues related to BlackBerry in 60 days, by which time the DoT is expected to submit its report.
The Ministry earlier imposed a deadline of August 31 on RIM and made it clear that the company would have to offer a solution to share heavily encrypted data or be ready to face a shutdown of its operations in India.
The government was concerned that terror elements could misuse BlackBerry's heavily encrypted services. There are about 10 lakh BlackBerry subscribers in India.
Home Ministry officials have been holding discussions with RIM over the past few weeks on the issue of getting lawful access for intelligence and law enforcement agencies to the communications passing through RIM systems.
The Ministry made it clear that any communication through telecom networks should be accessible to law enforcement agencies.
The Hindu : News / National : BlackBerry gives in, to set up server in India
Canada-based Research in Motion (RIM), the maker of BlackBerry, on Monday provided certain proposals for lawful access to its services by India's security agencies, sources in the Home Ministry said.
The proposals would be operationalised immediately and the company would set up a server in India, the sources added.
At a high-level meeting chaired by Home Secretary G.K. Pillai, it was decided that the Department of Telecommunication (DoT) would study the feasibility of all such services being provided through the server located only in India.
The Ministry, in a release, said it would review security issues related to BlackBerry in 60 days, by which time the DoT is expected to submit its report.
The Ministry earlier imposed a deadline of August 31 on RIM and made it clear that the company would have to offer a solution to share heavily encrypted data or be ready to face a shutdown of its operations in India.
The government was concerned that terror elements could misuse BlackBerry's heavily encrypted services. There are about 10 lakh BlackBerry subscribers in India.
Home Ministry officials have been holding discussions with RIM over the past few weeks on the issue of getting lawful access for intelligence and law enforcement agencies to the communications passing through RIM systems.
The Ministry made it clear that any communication through telecom networks should be accessible to law enforcement agencies.
The Hindu : News / National : BlackBerry gives in, to set up server in India