BlackBerry’s
phones now serve an incredibly slim niche market, which has forced the
company to look in other places for revenue. Under CEO John Chen,
BlackBerry
has been reinventing itself as an enterprise security software and
services company that no longer has to rely on smartphone sales for
growth. Chen’s plan got a major boost on Thursday when BlackBerry
announced that it will partner with Google to help make Android devices
used in enterprises more secure than ever before.
“BlackBerry
and Google are working closely together to set new standards in
enterprise mobile security for organizations deploying Android devices,”
BlackBerry explains. “Android Lollipop delivers key enterprise
functionality and addresses any previous enterprise security concerns.
BES12 supports Android Lollipop, allowing you to confidently deploy
Android devices in your organization.”
In
addition to standard BES12 features that are already supported with
Lollipop, BlackBerry says the deal with Google will allow for “new
features… that enable organizations to further secure enterprise and
personal data on Android devices, set new levels of hardware based
encryption, and ensure tight integration with Google Play for Work, for
increased application management.”
At
any rate, this seems like a good deal for both companies as it will
help keep BlackBerry relevant in the BYOD era while it will help Google
ease enterprise customers’ concerns about Android’s overall security.