Blackberry and AMD join forces to forge robotic revolution
Wall Street agrees
BlackBerry and AMD are fusing their expertise which they say will to revolutionise the world of robotics.
Blackberry doing well
Apparently it has become more cybersecurity
BlackBerry reported its first-quarter results, beating analysts’ expectations, thanks to its cybersecurity business.
Blackberry wants to settle eight year old lawsuit
It could get messy
BlackBerry wants to settle a more than eight-year-old lawsuit claiming it defrauded shareholders by inflating the success and profitability of its long-discontinued BlackBerry 10 smartphones.
Blackberry flogs its patent portfolio
For whom the bell trolls
BlackBerry announced a sale of its prized patent portfolio for $600 million to "Catapult IP Innovations Inc.," a new company BlackBerry describes as "a special purpose vehicle formed to acquire the BlackBerry patent assets."
Blackberry OS is now officially dead
There might be a few still around
Ancient BlackBerry phone running BlackBerry OS are now officially going to be out of support.
Blackberry phones ain't dead yet
Someone else wants a crack at it
It looks like someone else wants to take up the Blackberry mantle after TCL announced plans to stop producing BlackBerry phones later this year.
It took five years to crack an encrypted Blackberry
Breaking bad
An encrypted BlackBerry device that was cracked five years after it was first seized by police is poised to be the key piece of evidence in one of the state's longest-running drug importation investigations.
FBI tried to force mobile phone maker to install a backdoor
Looks like all that Huawei stuff is projection
The FBI tried to force the owner of an encrypted phone company to put a backdoor in his devices.
BlackBerry buys Cylance
Writes $1.4 billion cheque
BlackBerry announced that it has agreed to acquire endpoint security firm Cylance for $1.4 billion in cash.
Secure Blackberry phone CEO pleads guilty
Drugs conviction for Phantom Secure's Ramos
The Canadian executive of a 10-year-old company that marketed its purportedly secure BlackBerry services to thousands of criminals - who paid at least $4,000 per year, per device - has pleaded guilty to a racketeering conspiracy charge.