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Gold/Mining/Energy : Certicom Corporation (TSE:CIC, NASD:CERT)

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To: lamont smith who started this subject3/20/2002 6:16:40 PM
From: Dexter Lives On  Read Replies (1) of 4913
 
Last week, Nokia said Communicators will have Nokia-grown VPN clients available for free. At the time, VP of Nokia Mobile Solutions Bob Brace told ComputerWire: "The wireless VPN client licensing model is dated. I'm not sure how other companies that make clients will sell them."

The comments evidently took Certicom by surprise, and Nokia seemed to backpedal somewhat yesterday, saying in a Certicom press release: "[movianVPN] will complement Nokia's own client, which will be available later this year as separate software for corporate users that deploy Nokia VPN infrastructures."

Last week, Nokia's Brace said that although its VPN client has not been extensively tested with other gateways (it sells its own gateway appliance, OEMing Check Point's software), support for the IPSec protocol should make interoperability with most third party vendors, including Cisco, easy.

Panjwani said that Certicom's growth will also come from complementary client products, such as movianCrypt, which encrypts data stored locally on mobile devices. Clearly, data obtained securely over a wireless VPN still runs the risk of being compromised if, say, a PDA on which it is subsequently stored is stolen, a problem movianCrypt addresses but VPN software does not.

Certicom also yesterday announced the release of movianCrypt, previously available only for the Palm OS-based PDAs, for the Pocket PC. Panjwani would not specifically commit Certicom to releasing a Symbian version, but the company's strategy seems to require such a move.

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