United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia To Block BlackBerry Over Security Fears

ADAM SCHRECK   08/ 1/10 05:14 PM ET   AP

Blackberry

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The United Arab Emirates outlined plans Sunday to block BlackBerry e-mail, messaging and Web browsing services in a crackdown that could jeopardize efforts to establish the country as an international business hub.

The government cited a potential security threat because encrypted data sent on the devices is moved abroad, where it cannot be monitored for illegal activity. But the decision – quickly followed by a similar move in Saudi Arabia – raises questions about whether the conservative Gulf nations are trying to further control content they deem politically or morally objectionable.

BlackBerry phones have a strong following in the region, not only among foreign professionals in commercial centers such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi, but also among youth who see their relatively secure communication channels as a way to avoid unwanted government attention.

"The authorities have used a variety of arguments, like it can be used by terrorists" to justify the crackdown, said Christopher Davidson, a professor at the University of Durham in Britain, who has written extensively about the region. "Yes that's true, but it can also be used by civil society campaigners and activists."

The UAE's decision will prevent hundreds of thousands of BlackBerry users from accessing e-mail and the Web on their handsets starting in October. It's unclear whether the ban will extend to foreign visitors with roaming services, including the roughly 100,000 passengers who pass through the region's busiest airport in Dubai each day.

The ban risks further damaging the UAE's reputation as a relatively easy place to do business.

Dubai, one of seven hereditary sheikdoms in the federation, in particular has sought to turn itself into a global finance, trade and tourism hub. But its reputation has been tarnished by a credit crisis that has left the emirate more than $100 billion in debt.

Residents say the BlackBerry crackdown will only do more harm, making foreign businesses think twice before setting up shop in the country.

"They'll think now they've banned the BlackBerry, maybe next time it'll be the Internet," said Shakir Mahmood, a Dubai-based debt collector and BlackBerry user originally from Iraq.

This isn't the first time BlackBerry and Emirati officials have had run-ins over security and the popular handsets, a fixture in professionals' pockets and purses the world over.

Last year, BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. criticized a directive by the UAE state-owned mobile operator Etisalat telling the company's BlackBerry users to install software described as an "upgrade" required for "service enhancements."

RIM said tests showed it was in fact spy software that could allow outsiders to access private information stored on the phones. It strongly distanced itself from Etisalat's decision and told users how to remove the software.

Within hours of Sunday's UAE decision to block BlackBerry services, a telecommunications official in neighboring Saudi Arabia said the desert kingdom would do the same, starting later this month. The Saudi official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media, said the country's telecommunications regulator would issue a statement soon.

Ali Mohammed of Saudi Telecom, however, said the company had "not received any instructions about BlackBerry from the ministry."

Government censors in both Saudi Arabia and the UAE routinely block access to websites and other media deemed to carry content that runs contrary to the nations' conservative Islamic values or that could stoke political unrest.

Regulators in the UAE say BlackBerry devices operate outside a set of national security and safety laws enacted in 2007, the year after the BlackBerry debuted in the UAE. They say they are concerned some BlackBerry services "allow users to act without any legal accountability, causing judicial, social and national security concerns."

The government said it is singling out the BlackBerry, and not other smart phones such as Apple Inc.'s iPhone and Nokia Corp. handsets, because the Blackberry is the only one that automatically sends users' data to servers overseas.

Unlike other smart phones, BlackBerry devices use a system that updates a user's inbox by sending encrypted messages through company servers abroad, including RIM's home country of Canada.

Users like the system because it is seen as more secure, but it also makes BlackBerry messages far harder to monitor than ones sent through domestic servers that authorities can more easily tap into, analysts say.

"This is the irony, that it's the device with the highest security features. These same security features that corporations like have become an issue of national security for the government," said Simon Simonian, an analyst at Dubai-based investment bank Shuaa Capital. "The UAE doesn't want to take any chances and they want to monitor what is going on in the country."

The dispute highlights an ongoing tug-of-war between autocratic governments determined to control what information citizens consume online and share with others, and technology providers whose loyalties lie with their customers and shareholders.

Similar tensions erupted earlier this year between China and Google Inc. after the Internet company said it would stop censoring its search results in the country. After China warned it might not renew its license, Google agreed to obey local laws and stop automatically switching mainland users to its unfiltered Hong Kong site.

Emirati authorities are eager to portray an image of a safe and stable society free from the extremism found elsewhere in the region. They have taken steps to crack down on terror financing and efforts by neighboring Iran to sidestep international sanctions over its nuclear program.

Davidson cited alarm in the UAE and other Gulf nations over the role online organization played in helping to drive anti-government protests in Iran during the 2009 elections as a factor in their moves to tighten Internet controls.

Emirati regulators said in a statement they sought to reach a compromise with RIM on their concerns, but failed to come to an agreement.

"With no solution available and in the public interest ... BlackBerry Messenger, BlackBerry E-mail and BlackBerry Web-browsing services will be suspended until an acceptable solution can be developed and applied," said the director-general of the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority, Mohamed al-Ghanim.

"BlackBerry appears to be compliant in similar regulatory environments of other countries, which makes noncompliance in the UAE both disappointing and of great concern," he added in a statement carried on state news agency WAM.

A spokeswoman for RIM said the Canadian company had no immediate comment.

Other countries, including India and the Gulf state of Bahrain, have also raised concerns about BlackBerry messaging features, but have not blocked them outright.

RIM said in a statement last week it "respects both the regulatory requirements of government and the security and privacy needs of corporations and consumers."

The company declined to disclose details of talks it has had with regulators in the more than 175 countries where it operates, but defended its phones' security features as "widely accepted" by customers and governments.

Etisalat and Du, the UAE's two state-run telephone companies, said they are working on alternative services for their BlackBerry customers.

RIM does not disclose the number of BlackBerry users in the UAE. However, analyst Simonian estimated there are "hundreds of thousands" of BlackBerry users in the country.

None contacted by The Associated Press on Sunday said they supported the pending ban.

"I find it irritating, actually. It's a service everyone is using, and all of a sudden, they're just going to disconnect it?" said a 30-year-old manager at a Dubai mall who would give only his first name, Khalid, because he did not want to attract attention from the authorities.

___

Associated Press Writers Abdullah al-Shihri in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and Michael Casey in Dubai contributed to this report.

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The United Arab Emirates outlined plans Sunday to block BlackBerry e-mail, messaging and Web browsing services in a crackdown that could jeopardize efforts to estab...
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The United Arab Emirates outlined plans Sunday to block BlackBerry e-mail, messaging and Web browsing services in a crackdown that could jeopardize efforts to estab...
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12:08 AM on 08/09/2010
Okay unless anyone has proof of an decrypted messages that was processed by a BlackBerry Enterprise server every single person on all of these threads needs to just chill out. If you read the Globe and Mail article the consumer data is already insecure so this posturing by these governments means nothing. They've always been able to do it. The issue lies with the corporate solution and eventually 'the bad guys' will figure that out as well and start using the corporate solution and signing their messages in SMIME or PGP.

If these governments were worried before about public use of data that wasn't encrypted they've really done themselves in now...
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06:38 PM on 08/03/2010
http://blogs.forbes.com/firewall/2010/08/02/rim-helps-russia-china-monitor-blackberry-users-emails/

On November, 2007, in order to sell its devices inside Russia, RIM provided its encryption keys to Mobile TeleSystems (MTS) which, in turn, provided access to the Federal Security Service (FSB). The official Russian law which mandates this supervision is Order № 6 from 16.01.2008 "About the statement of Requirements for telecommunication networks for operational and search activities."

In January, 2008, RIM China announced that BlackBerry sales through China Mobile were on track although 2007 was the expected start date. The delay was due to the fact that “RIM needed to satisfy Beijing that its handsets posed no security threat to China's communication networks, according to sector analysts.” There's only one way to satisfy the Chinese government regarding “security threats” and that's to comply with Chinese law regarding supervision and monitoring.

On July 28, 2010, India told RIM to either allow New Delhi to monitor its customers encrypted e-mails and SMS messages or they will terminate RIMs authorization to sell in India. Indian intelligence services want the same privileges enjoyed by other foreign intelligence services including, reportedly, the U.S. and Chinese governments.

Lame, I was almost going to big-up RIM until I read this.
11:20 AM on 08/03/2010
The Iefties of Canada thought they could support the Iefties of China!
11:19 AM on 08/03/2010
Why did this Canadian company setup a server in China but not in other countries?
11:17 AM on 08/03/2010
India too is demanding that this company put a server in India. If they don't, they would get kicked out off India too. There are Islamic terr0rists that needs to be watched in India.

When Canada can set up a server in China, They better do it for other countries as well!

Go Fish!
11:15 AM on 08/03/2010
The Chanuk areseholes capitulated to China when China demanded that Canada give the encryption code to them and set up a server in China.

So this is the natural order of things... Many countries are demanding the same for themselves.

Some arseholes think, they can placate China but not others. Pffft!
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08:58 AM on 08/03/2010
Note to self: Strike Dubai from the list of places I have to visit before I die.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lp4ju
CALIFORNIA LOVE
08:38 PM on 08/02/2010
well I won't ever visit UAE....I love my BB
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relians
the interconnectedness of all things
04:29 PM on 08/02/2010
these countries are not our allies, they are the mic's allies.
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Roguewolf
30-Year Military Veteran
03:58 PM on 08/02/2010
On schedule? He promised 16 months after he took office.
12:59 PM on 08/02/2010
Most rich Islamic states play a dangerous and utterly irrational game of trying to contain Islamic Jihadism within their own border while exporting and financing the very same Jihadist imperialism to the rest of the world.
03:49 PM on 08/02/2010
Exporting “jihadist imperialism”? Or is it imperialist jihadism?

Assuming this is true, is it because they're rich or Islamic? Or are they just plain irrational and those are accidental details?

And of course, why? There's got to be a rational explanation for this irrationality?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CoffinRide
12:50 PM on 08/02/2010
Makes you wonder if Blackwater's former leader Eric Prince will still be able to use his Blackberry in Dubai...

Considering he's also a "Protected American Corporate Interest" living abroad...
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:49 AM on 08/02/2010
Can't have any anti islamic stuff penetrating their societies, gawd a women with her face and hair showing how scandalous!!!!!!!!!!!!
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knosiswar
Major General Smedley Butler - get to know him
09:46 AM on 08/02/2010
They are two of the three countries that have diplomatically recognized the Taliban, the third being Pakistan. These countries are infected by Radical Wahhabist Islam with the root growing and spreading from Saudi Arabia, funded and supported by the Royal house of Saud. All 19 Hi jackers, Bin Laden and Al Qaeda are products of the state instituted religion of Saudi Arabia. The biggest threat to America and its interests is the house of Saud, who enjoy their power and wealth under a tyrannical government. But escape scrutiny even from the U.N.


http://www.globalpolitician.com/23661-saudi

Saudi Arabia, Wahhabism and the Spread of Sunni Theofascism

Ambassador Curtin Winsor, Ph.D. (Reagan Appointee)
11:34 AM on 08/02/2010
One hijacker was egyptian.
11:52 AM on 08/02/2010
And one was Kuwaiti and 2 were Emirati
03:53 PM on 08/02/2010
knosiswar?

How ironinc! I thought Knosis was the capital of a completely peaceful civilization!
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knosiswar
Major General Smedley Butler - get to know him
04:59 PM on 08/02/2010
Do you mean Knossos? Its a play on gnosticism and its journey of innerpeace and a commentary on the war against the information that can set a person free, a knowledge war if you will.
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08:58 AM on 08/02/2010
Used by terrorists....what a joke.....Saudi Arabia hasn't done anything to stop terrorists, Osama bin Laden, without banning the Blackberry....Just another way to oppress women under the guise of religion.