A recent report by Allied
Market Research on the growing global mobile security market highlights the
rise of BYOD (bring your own device) workplace architectures, ranging from SMEs
to large organizations with international workforces, as one of the core drivers
behind the surging demand for more secure mobile environments. The market for
mobile security is projected as climbing to over $34.8 billion within the next
five years alone on a roaring CAGR of 40.8%, as more and more companies reach
for the immense benefits of improved-employee satisfaction and increased
productivity from the BYOD workplace experience, even as consumers also flock
to mobile-enabled ecommerce and banking options.
Consumers really love
their mobile devices and the growing amount of retail and other transactions
done via mobile can attest to that directly, with the global business to
consumer ecommerce market on track to hit around $2.4 trillion in sales
worldwide by 2017, according to recent forecasts by eMarketer. In Q4 last year alone,
Strategy Analytics computes that smartphone shipments grew 31% annually to hit
a record 380 million units, with Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Samsung (OTCM:SSNLF)
tied for volume, as a record 1.3 billion plus smartphones shipped worldwide
during the entire year. Despite the immense popularity of mobile devices and
the numerous logistical benefits, both to businesses and consumers, the broader
mobile device spectrum has become a major target for hackers and various other
forms of cybercrime, creating a serious concern for banks and other financial
institutions in particular when it comes to capturing and satisfying this
market.
The same logistical
benefits of mobile devices that exist for banking and financial transactions,
or ecommerce implementations, also exist readily for the healthcare and
government markets. In both additional markets though, the same demand for
security is increasingly becoming obvious. In the case of sensitive, personal
healthcare or government agency data, the need for robust security that cannot
be compromised by relative device integrity is paramount. As smartphone use
grows and grows, and the number of applications increases accordingly,
broad-spectrum security solutions will become a dominant facet of the market
and the companies who can satisfy this massive demand will be catapulted to the
forefront of the space.
The $2.9 billion Motorola
Mobility acquisition by Lenovo (OTC:LNVGY) in October allowed them to capture
6% of the global smartphone market, enabling Lenovo to compete directly in
China with major private companies Xiaomi and Huawei as the number three global
smartphone company, but the recent Superfish story sheds light on the core
security issues resident in the mobile computing space. While the story emerged
over Superfish software installed on Lenovo PCs, Superfish actually began
experimenting last year with free “LikeThat” mobile apps in the iTunes and
Android stores using their technology, and the cause for concern has largely
been with the Superfish adware’s compromising of apparently (to the user)
secure/encrypted private email or bank sessions. Superfish’s technology, a
particularly aggressive form of targeted advertising, tracks consumer’s
activity in an attempt to match them with better deals, but in the process, otherwise
secure sessions are also exposed to hackers.
Into this complex
environment soldiers electronic transaction processing solutions developer,
Consorteum Holdings (OTC:CSRH), who, while still in the development-stage,
already has a wealth of experience as a systems integrator for the financial
services, payment, and transaction processing sectors. The development of a
unique UMI (universal mobile interface) via the company’s ThreeFiftyNine Inc.
(359) subsidiary (which has over a decade of experience), in conjunction with
their Thin Client Server and Hybrid Mobile Application architecture, offers
just the kind of robust security that banking, ecommerce, financial
institution, healthcare, and government clients need.
Moreover, the powerful
geo-fencing and geo-location technology developed by 359 for mobile compliance
gaming, in order to prevent location spoofing, can be directly applied to
numerous security protocols for the aforementioned markets. Key techniques and
technologies employed by 359’s multi-device, multi-OS platform, are very
similar to anti-virus software and can be used to detect rooted or jailbroken
devices, effectively defeating location spoofing, a common tool in the hacker’s
arsenal used to compromise personal identities that are tied to a device or
given transaction. The enormous potential of such a robust security
environment, further enabled by tight geo-fencing and geo-location technology,
could help transform the BYOD healthcare, government and enterprise workplace,
as well as the ecommerce/banking landscape, ensuring that network activity
passing to and from the corporate intranet is protocol-consistent and clean.
To learn more about
Consorteum Holdings, visit www.consorteum.com
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