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AFP - Before the National Security Agency began complaining about being shut out of encrypted devices, it helped develop software for secure communications that could be adapted by the private sector.
That technology is hitting the public this month in the form of a smartphone application called Scrambl3 from a California startup which claims its “dark Internet tunnel” thwarts snooping on voice calls and messages.
Scrambl3 was launched yesterday as a stand-alone app for Android devices by the startup, USMobile, which describes it as a way to create “trusted connections on untrusted networks.”
The system creates the smartphone equivalent of a virtual private network to make messages invisible on the Internet, according to USMobile president and co-founder Jon Hanour.
“We want to provide the most private and most secure mobile program on the market,” Hanour told AFP.
“We think we have the best combination of anything that’s available today.”
Hanour says Scrambl3 adds an extra layer of encryption compared with other secure messaging apps, using a technology stemming from the NSA “Fishbowl” project -- technical specifications of which were released in 2012 by the agency.
“The only other network using this is one at the Department of Defense for classified communications,” he said.
“If you are not protecting encrypted traffic within a highly encrypted VPN, then you are not secure in today’s environment.”
While the system was developed in collaboration with the NSA, it has no “backdoor” access for the intelligence agency, according to USMobile. “We believe the NSA cannot break our encryption,” Hanour said.
USMobile will not store voice mails or messages on its servers and will not use the public telephone network, allowing users to bypass surveillance and making data inaccessible to law enforcement or other investigations.
Because of its strong encryption, the software requires a special US export license and cannot be sold to countries such as North Korea, Syria or Iran on a list of sponsors of terrorist activity.
Interestingly, the NSA and FBI in recent months have complained that encryption used by Apple and Google, which will not retain access keys, would make it more difficult to track down criminals and terrorists.
But Hanour said society has a greater interest in protecting sensitive data such as trade secrets, from snooping.