Samsung Knox Raises Android Security Game

Following the BlackBerry announcement of BES 10 as a general-purpose mobile management solution, Samsung has expanded its SAFE program to include EMM features like MAM and business/personal partitioning. These companies are advancing the technology for customers. Where are Microsoft and Apple in this?

Larry Seltzer, Contributor

March 11, 2013

1 Min Read
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The handset makers are making a play to standardize management and security of their devices in enterprises and especially in BYOD scenarios. Well, some of them are making more of a play than others.

The first big example we got of this was BlackBerry and BES 10. As I explained last week, BES 10 includes some of the new techniques of EMM (Enterprise Mobility Management) such as MAM (Mobile Application Management) and a separation of user and business personalities. These are emerging as the two key technologies in the next generation of mobile device management.

Now Samsung has announced similar capabilities for their phones. It's called Samsung Knox — it's not an acronym, I guess it's an allusion to Fort Knox (where, since 1937, the Treasury Department has stored the highly-secure United States Bullion Depository). There's more to Knox than MAM and personal/user "partitioning," as they call it, but I think these are the most appealing.

Read the full article here.

Larry Seltzer is the editorial director for BYTE, Dark Reading, and Network Computing.

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Larry Seltzer

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