BlackBerry maker, Research In Motion (RIM), has taken a more pro-active approach to maintaining their BlackBerry servers. Rather than waiting for vulnerabilities to rear their ugly head and take down enterprise users' entire BlackBerry email-backends, RIM has announced that they've identified and patched a vulnerability in their BlackBerry Enterprise Server related to PDF-parsing. The se
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IntoMobile on 23rd Jul 2008 (via intomobile.com)
The 5.0 release of BlackBerry Enterprise Server, due late this year, will test not only enterprise BlackBerry administrators but also its creator, Research in Motion. At stake will be whether RIM's software can perform at a new level of enterprise expectations and whether the company itself can.
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NetworkWorld on 25th May 2008 (via networkworld.com)
Research In Motion, known mainly as a mobile e-mail vendor, is making a surprising effort to leverage the voice side of the BlackBerry smartphone, positioning its server software as a way to blend cellular and corporate voice networks by linking the BlackBerry server with the corporate PBX.
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NetworkWorld on 16th May 2008 (via networkworld.com)
When I first read this article, “BlackBerry Server Ripe For Hacking,” on Techworld I was shocked and had to read. I guess I am a sucker for titles. So I read the article and from what I am understanding there is an issue with CERTAIN implementations of BES that could open backdoors through your BES. The
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BerryReview on 11th Mar 2008 (via berryreview.com)
Research In Motion announced that its BlackBerry Enterprise Server and BlackBerry device software have been awarded Common Criteria Evaluation Assurance Level 2 augmented (EAL 2+) validations. The certifications were awarded at the 8th International Common Criteria Conference in Rome and acknowledge the robust security features of the BlackBerry Enterprise Solution. "RIM is a pioneer and longstand
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LetsGoMobile on 12th Dec 2007 (via letsgomobile.org)