Tag Archives: bbry

Can Struggling BlackBerry Show Improvements With Q4 Earnings?

Deep in a turnaround that aims to reverse a long deceleration in revenue, BlackBerry ( BBRY ) is set to report earnings before the market open Friday. The smartphone maker that once dominated the field prior to the Apple ( AAPL ) iPhone and Alphabet ’s ( GOOGL ) Android is pivoting to other areas. BlackBerry has made several acquisitions in the last two years, among them its $425 million purchase of software company Good Technology. The deal widely expanded BlackBerry’s security software platform to other smartphones and operating systems. BlackBerry will report fiscal fourth quarter earnings for the period that ended Feb. 29. The consensus estimate on revenue is $563.2 million — down 15% year over year but an improvement over the 31% drop in the prior quarter. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expect BlackBerry to report a loss of 10 cents per share. “While the company may currently be showing possible signs of a recovery, we note that much of this strength can be attributed to IP licensing sales of $53 million last quarter,” wrote Credit Suisse analyst Kulbinder Garcha. He has an underperform rating on BlackBerry and a price target of 6. BlackBerry stock closed at 8.09 Thursday, up 1%. Since hitting a low of 6.39 on Feb. 11, the stock is up 26%. “We believe the company is still faced with a challenging transition ahead,” Garcha wrote. “Despite strong software revenue last quarter of $162 million, we doubt the sustainability of the software business, as the IP licensing revenue seems unpredictable.”

Billions Of Apple iPhones May Be Vulnerable To Attack: Check Point

Billions of Apple ( AAPL ) iPhones and iPads could be exposed in an iOS 9 vulnerability, Check Point Software Technology ( CHKP ) researchers were slated to announce Thursday morning at Singapore’s Black Hat Asia 2016 conference. Enterprise applications installed via Mobile Device Management (MDM) software are exempt from Apple’s latest security changes, which means that an attacker can hijack legitimate communications to install malicious apps, says the security firm. It’s still theoretical, Avi Rembaum, Check Point vice president of security solutions, told IBD on Wednesday. Black Hat gives researchers an opportunity to discuss hypothetical threat vectors, including this new so-called “Sidestepper” vulnerability. “Unfortunately, a lot of those things we talk about that might happen often end up happening,” he said. Few Barriers To Entry Apple recognized a key piece of the Sidestepper vulnerability in iOS 8. For $299 a year, an enterprise can purchase an Apple certificate to upload a private app via the Apple Developer Enterprise Program. “But if someone is going to be malicious, they don’t really care about signing a (certificate) agreement, plus it’s $299 per year to get that certificate,” Rembaum said. “There weren’t many barriers to entry.” Enterprises are headily embracing the “Bring Your Own Device” trend and, in one case study of a Fortune 100 company, Check Point found 318 private apps and 116 unique certificates on employees’ devices. Those numbers were suspiciously high, Rembaum said. “When we looked deeper … they were on the sketchier side and were from parts of the world that could be problematic,” he said. “We saw a very small number of them that would be considered white-listed (trustworthy).” So in iOS 9, Apple upped the challenges to installation, says Check Point. But the new challenges don’t cover MDM-pushed updates to employees’ devices. Of the 1.2 billion installed iPhones and iPads, 79% have iOS installed and are therefore vulnerable. Intercepting Legit Connections Enterprises often rely on MDM services like those by BlackBerry ( BBRY ) (via its Good Technology acquisition),  VMWare ( VMW ) and MobileIron ( MOBL ) to push updates onto employees’ devices, thereby avoiding the “headache” of ensuring that every app has identical settings, Rembaum said. That MDM-device connection, however, is also a powerful portal for Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) attacks, he said. A hacker can, theoretically, intercept the communications between MDM and device to install a certificate and then a malicious app. Often, the interception relies on social engineering, he said. “An attacker would send a text message to the target with a link to download the configuration file,” he said. “It would install a certificate and configuration instructions in the phone. The only thing the user has to do is say yes to installing.” Then the attacker is in — with access to a user’s address book, microphone, photos, GPS, apps and, possibly, company data. Education Alone Isn’t Enough Rembaum recommends that MDM users take a “multilayer approach” to mobile security. Because hackers often rely on social engineering to launch phishing attacks — by email, text message or social media — enterprises should train employees on red flags. Phishing attacks cost businesses more than $215 million between October 2013 and December 2014, according to a January report by the FBI. This month, Seagate Technology ( STX ) discovered that it had been duped into handing out nearly 10,000 W-2 forms belonging to former and current employees. The Seagate revelation came on the heels of a similar attack on privately held Snapchat. Scammers often change a single letter in an email address or impersonate a CEO’s email address, Barracuda Networks ’ ( CUDA ) Slawek Ligier and Proofpoint ’s ( PFPT ) Ryan Kalember told IBD. Outside education, an enterprise can install Check Point’s Mobile Threat Prevention (MTP) software and have its employees install the ZoneAlarm app, Rembaum said. FireEye ( FEYE ), Symantec ( SYMC ), Intel ’s ( INTC ) McAfee, Palo Alto Networks ( PANW ) and Proofpoint also compete in the mobile security space. A MitM attacker creates an encrypted tunnel — typically through a virtual private network (VPN) — to its own site, directing a user away from the legitimate MDM. Check Point’s MTP solution hunts down that encrypted tunnel. “The user would have received the text, clicked on the link and installed the certificate,” Rembaum said. “Then (Check Point’s software) would reach out and block the connection.” He added: “The actual installation of the malware wouldn’t have succeeded.”

Apple Last Quarter Suffered First-Ever Decline In iPhone Sales

Apple ( AAPL ) iPhone sales to end users fell for the first time on a year-over-year basis in the fourth quarter, research firm Gartner ( IT ) said Thursday. The overall smartphone market saw sales to end users rise 9.7% worldwide to 403 million units in Q4. But iPhone sales declined 4.4% year over year to 71.5 million units, Gartner said. When Apple reported December-quarter results on Jan. 26, it said iPhone sales rose 0.4% to 74.78 million units. But Apple, among other vendors, counts iPhones sold into the sales channel, not those sold through to end customers. “Apple counts smartphone stock in retail inventory as ‘sold’ because Apple no longer owns it,” Gartner analyst Anshul Gupta told IBD via email. “Gartner does not consider this a sale to an end user and we use our own methodology to estimate sales to end users, based on Apple figures and other data.” Apple expects its own iPhone sales figures to fall on a year-over-year basis in the current quarter, Apple’s fiscal Q2 . Total industry smartphone sales to end users saw their slowest growth since 2008, Gartner said in a press release . In the fourth quarter, Samsung and Huawei were the only two top-five smartphone vendors to increase their sales to end users, Gupta said. South Korea-based Samsung continued to lead the industry, with sales to end users of 83.44 million smartphones in Q4, up 14.2% year over year. Its global smartphone market share rose to 20.7% last quarter from 19.9% a year earlier. Samsung makes smartphones based on the open-source Android operating system from Alphabet ‘s ( GOOGL ) Google. But Samsung’s share of the premium smartphone segment is eroding as more customers switch to iPhones, Gupta said. “For Samsung to stop its falling sales of premium smartphones, it needs to introduce new flagship smartphones that can compete with iPhones and stop the churn to iOS devices,” Gupta said.  Samsung is expected to unveil its latest flagship phone, the Galaxy S7 series, on Sunday ahead of the Mobile World Congress trade show in Barcelona, Spain. Apple easily held on to second place with 17.7% market share, down from 20.4% a year earlier. China-based Huawei came in third place with 32.12 million smartphones sold, up 52.7% year over year. Its market share jumped to 8% in Q4 from 5.7% a year earlier. Rounding out the top five last quarter were China-based vendors Lenovo and Xiaomi with 5% and 4.5% market share, respectively, Gartner said. Gartner expects Chinese smartphone makers to continue to grab market share in 2016. “They are well positioned to capitalize on demand for midrange to lower-end smartphones in emerging markets as they aggressively expand outside China,” Gartner analyst Roberta Cozza said in a report ahead of Mobile World Congress . “Their cost advantage allows them to push affordable, but more sophisticated midtier offerings, while increasing their brand awareness.” In terms of smartphone market share by operating system, Google’s Android OS climbed to 80.7% share in Q4, up from 76% in Q4 2014. The 17.7% share for Apple’s iOS was No. 2 Microsoft ‘s ( MSFT ) Windows faded to 1.1% market share in Q4, compared with 2.8% a year earlier. BlackBerry ( BBRY ) evaporated to 0.2% market share, vs. 0.5% in Q4 2014. Image provided by Shutterstock . RELATED: Over Quarter Of U.S. iPhone Owners Still Use 4-Inch Handsets Apple iPhone Sales In China Fall Off Cliff In January .