With the use of smartphones and tablets becoming more prevalent across the armed forces, the Department of Defense (DoD) is concerned with securing these devices to keep classified or confidential information out of the hands of adversaries.
With this in mind, the DoD has tapped a malware threat detection company called Invincea to develop a specialized and secure version of the Android operating system. The company has signed a $21.4 million contract with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the US Army Research Laboratory (ARL).
The Mobile Armour project aims to expand work Invincea researchers already have done to secure the Android operating system for military use, security features that eventually can also be used by the commercial and consumer sectors, according to the company.
The smartphones soldiers are using in the field will be getting more secure thanks to an enhanced Android operating system being designed by Invincea. The company already has developed a secure version of the operating system that's been deployed to 4,000 soldiers, and is expanding that security for phase two of a project called Mobile Armour. (Source: Army)
Invincea and the DoD have completed phase one of the project, which was to design a version of the open-source Android-based OS with specific controls so data can be wiped clean if the devices were to fall into the wrong hands, Stephen Ward, vice president of marketing for Invincea, told us. That phase lasted about eight months, and the DoD has distributed about 4,000 devices with the secure OS installed to soldiers using them on a military wireless network in the field in Afghanistan, he said.
Now the Invincea Labs subsidiary is using the new funds to carry on with phase two of the project, which focuses on external threats that could come from the network itself and is scheduled to last about four years. Ward said, "The project here phases into broader deployments and shifts focus away from only the OS and the hardening of the OS, and moves more into trying to address the cyber-based threat that could be aimed at those devices."
During phase two, Invincea researchers will focus on the "digital threat" to devices and build malware into the OS to ensure "we have advanced controls to prevent any malicious code from running or executing," Ward said. Invincea and the DoD will also distribute more devices using the secure version of Android during phase two, but Ward declined to disclose how many more devices will go into field deployments.
This is a good first step towards securing battlefield communications. As was mentioned, soldiers post about their movements, situations, etc. without regard to operational security. Hopefully, the secure access mechanisms will help prevent this. Does anyone know of a similar safeguard for the IPhone? I would think they are just as popular.
One main result of the COTS movement a few years back was that the military depended on leaky, hackable commercial software, as well as hardware, and then spent zillions trying to secure it. The problem has proliferated even more with solders' use of mobile devices. A ton of money has also been spent on attempts to design and/or retrofit secure embedded real-time OS. As Beth points out, remote wiping is not a new idea. OTOH, I'd assume that they've built in various military-specific secure access mechanisms.
I suspect this would also monitor what the users access, send or their contacts.
From what I've read, there were some missteps in the early days of the current war. Many would post messages on facebook and other places about what they were doing, where they were, etc, just as many young poeple do at home. But, in war, that info is more critical.
Security issues are the biggest problem for companies as they deal with the barrage of employee-owned mobile devices coming into the workplace and onto the corporate network. Obviously, the stakes are much higher when the phones are privvy to military applications or even just used in military environments. I'm wondering what this OS brings to the table, though, beyond any of the mobile device management (MDM) platforms that are widely available. Seems like capabilities like remote wiping of devices if they are lost or stolen is pretty commonplace. What would this offer beyond that?
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