Blackberry warning over 'French secrets'
French defence experts are advising government officials to avoid using BlackBerry handheld computers because of fears that secrets could be put at risk.
The move is reportedly to avoid snooping by US intelligence agencies and the loss of commercial and other secrets.
âItâs not a question of trust,â French lawmaker Pierre Lasbordes said. âWe are friends with the Americans, the Anglo-Saxons, but itâs economic war.â
Le Monde described BlackBerry withdrawal among those who have given up their PDAs.
âWe feel that we are wasting huge amounts of time, having to relearn how to work in the old way,â the daily quoted a ministry office director as saying.
E-mails sent from BlackBerries pass through servers in the United States and Britain, and France fears that makes the system vulnerable to snooping by the National Security Agency, the eyes and ears of US intelligence, Le Monde reported.
The company that makes BlackBerries, however, denies such spying is possible.
Lasbordes, who was commissioned in 2005 by then-Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin to look into such issues, said he alerted the government about the issue months ago.
He said he met with Research In Motion Ltd, which makes BlackBerries, to discuss the problem in the course of preparing his report on the security of French information systems.
The Canadian company âadmitted that there was a certain fragility in the protection of information when you use the e-mail systemâ and promised it would be resolved, said Lasbordes, adding: âThat was more than a year ago.â
BlackBerries pose âa problem with the protection of informationâ and âthe risks of interception are real,â Alain Juillet, in charge of economic intelligence for the government, told Le Monde.
Research In Motion insisted that BlackBerry e-mails cannot be read by the NSA or other spy organisations.
The e-mails are more heavily encrypted than online banking web sites, Research In Motion said in a written statement.
âNo one, including RIM, has the ability to view the content of any data communication sent using the BlackBerry Enterprise Solution,â the company said.
The BlackBerry system has been accredited by security agencies in the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Austria and Canada, Research in Motion said, adding that a certification process is under way in the Netherlands and Germany.
In France, the circular on BlackBerries from the General Secretariat for National Defence applies in theory to all ministries, and âitâs up to everyone to be responsibleâ, Lasbordes said.
Another official in a major ministry who got rid of his BlackBerry following the order said authorities are looking at other types of PDA that they may be able to use instead.
The prime ministerâs office would not confirm that it and the presidential palace were covered by the circular, as Le Monde said. But a spokesman, Severin Naudet, cited the General Secretariat for National Defence as saying that no type of PDA is risk-free.
âItâs not a problem if youâre writing to your mother-in-law,â Lasbordes said. But âone can imagine a minister coming from a meeting of the G8 or G7, etc, or a meeting in Brussels, and he sends information to his colleagues. It goes via Canada and the United States and thatâs it, game over.â
Suspicion, however, goes both ways. At a G8 summit in Germany this month, White House aides were instructed to leave their wireless e-mail devices behind, apparently for fear of Russian eavesdropping.





