Skip to main content

BlackBerry confirms it’s working with Boeing to offer ultra-secure ‘spy’ phone

blackberry confirms its working with boeing on ultra secure phone black
Image used with permission by copyright holder
BlackBerry and Boeing are teaming up to offer the aerospace company’s ultra-secure ‘spy’ smartphone.

Reports of the ‘Boeing Black’ device have been knocking around for over two years, though with BlackBerry’s announced involvement it seems the project is about to take its next step forward.

The Android device is geared toward those working for government agencies, or any organization where data security is paramount, and is unlikely to get a public release.

BlackBerry boss John Chen confirmed his company’s involvement during a conference call with financial analysts on Friday.

“We’re pleased to announce that Boeing is collaborating with BlackBerry to provide a secure mobile solution for Android devices utilizing our BES 12 platform,” Chen said, adding (presumably with his tongue firmly in his cheek), “That, by the way, is all they allow me to say.”

According to Bloomberg, Boeing has been testing its smartphone with BlackBerry’s BES, the company’s business enterprise server product that helps large organizations manage their employees’ mobile devices in a secure environment.

‘Pursuing a number of opportunities’

Boeing spokesman Andy Lee told Bloomberg the two firms are “pursuing a number of opportunities….to help [BlackBerry] ensure the BES 12 operating system is compatible with, and optimized for use by, the ultra-secure mobile devices favored by the defense and security community.”

Boeing Black

While many media reports have described Boeing’s phone as having the ability to “self-destruct” if tampered with, banish from your mind images of dramatic explosions or meltdowns. It appears that if this particular device gets in the wrongs hands, it merely erases all of its data.

An FCC filing published earlier this year elaborated: “Any attempt to break open the casing of the device would trigger functions that would delete the data and software contained within the device and make the device inoperable.”

According to Boeing, the phone can be configured to link with biometric sensors or satellites, and an array of attachments allow it to extend battery life and utilize solar power.

Details released earlier this year revealed a 4.3-inch, 170g slab almost twice as thick as the the iPhone 6. It’s possible the design has been refined since then, though at the time of writing Boeing’s webpage [pdf] for the device continues to show the same specs.

Boeing said its phone will only be sold “in a manner such that low-level technical and operational information about the product will not be provided to the general public.”

As for BlackBerry, working with Boeing on a secure mobile product fits with Chen’s strategy to focus on areas that made the Canadian company such a powerful force in the market in the years before iOS and Android unceremoniously knocked it from its perch.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
BlackBerry Key2 LE: Everything you need to know
The BlackBerry Key2 LE is back home at Verizon, but only for business types
BlackBerry Key2 LE Hands On

The BlackBerry Key LE is a lower-cost version of the Key2, doing away with some of the more high-tech features seen on the expensive sister phone, and cutting costs by using different materials for the body, to create a more affordable but still distinctly BlackBerry smartphone.

You can check out our Key2 LE review to learn more about what it's like to live with the phone, but in the meantime, here are all the technical specs, details, and availability options.
Updates
The BlackBerry Key2 LE is available to buy at Verizon, but only to business and enterprise customers, according to reports. Verizon's selling the Key2 LE for $450 without a contract, or for $100 if you sign up for a two-year plan. The phone does not show up on Verizon's non-business store, so there does not seem to be the option to buy the phone for this price without a business plan.

Read more
The Honor Magic 6 RSR is my new favorite Android phone of 2024
Someone holding the Honor Magic 6 RSR outside.

There's no doubt that 2024 has already been an exciting year for Android phones. Samsung wowed us with the Galaxy S24 series at the beginning of the year, the OnePlus 12 and 12R are two of the best phones available right now, and Google is expected to impress later this month with the Google Pixel 8a.

But for the last few weeks, I haven't been thinking about any of those phones. Why? Because I've been using the Honor Magic 6 RSR. After launching in China this past March, the Magic 6 RSR is now available in the EU, and that's allowed more folks than ever to get their hands on the phone. And that's great, because the Honor Magic 6 RSR has quickly become my new favorite Android phone of 2024.
It has some of 2024's best smartphone hardware

Read more
5 phones you should buy instead of the Samsung Galaxy S24 Plus
A Samsung Galaxy S24 Plus laying on concrete.

Looking to upgrade your phone this year? You may be considering Samsung’s new Galaxy S24 Plus, which is the middle child of the S24 lineup. Given how solid the S24 Plus is, that's not a bad idea at all.

But is the Galaxy S24 Plus the best phone you can get? Maybe not, as there are plenty of other great choices that you can choose from as well. Here are some of the best alternatives to the Galaxy S24 Plus that you should take a look at before spending your hard-earned dollars.
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra

Read more