RIM: BlackBerry's future lies in social networking

BARCELONA, Spain--The secret of the BlackBerry's success is security, according to Research In Motion's co-chief executive, Jim Balsillie, but social networking is its future.

Speaking during a session on mobile services here at the GSMA Mobile World Congress, Balsillie said having security validations worldwide, and features such as built-in firewalls and the ability to remotely lock and wipe devices, are key.

"If you don't address this, you don't get to be accepted by the organization," Balsillie warned.

Echoing Vodafone Group chief executive Arun Sarin's words from an earlier keynote, Balsillie said carriers have come to a fork in the road that will see them either become pipes or platforms. They must therefore provide a managed service to users, seamlessly integrating Web services and desktop applications onto handsets. "This is not a concept. This is a reality," he said.

And change is afoot elsewhere too, according to Balsillie, who said a business-to-business social-networking revolution is coming that will bring networking benefits to the enterprise and also help drive data usage. "Once social networking becomes a B2B phenomenon--not unlike IM and texting--I believe every single social-networking user will want a data plan," he told the GSMA audience.

Balsillie added that some of the largest companies in the world are considering giving all their employees BlackBerry devices. "Just ask a CIO," he said. "They want everyone to be a mobile worker."

Natasha Lomas of Silicon.com reported from London.

More from News.com on this story's topics

Social networks

RSS feed

Wireless e-mail devices

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Research In Motion

Create an email alert | RSS feed

See more CNET content tagged:
Research In Motion Ltd., social networking, B2B, RIM BlackBerry, networking

Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News.com to your homepage or feedreader.
Google
Yahoo
MSN
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Today's Top Stories
Charter catches flak on Web monitoring
Alltel joins LTE bandwagon
Mono offers open-source spin on Silverlight
Birthing pains in colonization of the social Web
iPhone expands its empire, once again
Most Popular Stories
CBS to buy CNET Networks
Images: Microsoft telescope puts universe on your desktop
End of Intel, AMD duopoly near? Via readies Isaiah chip
If Gates is right, how much longer for keyboards & mice?
Photos: Microsoft previews 2008 Xbox games
Resource center from News.com sponsors
You can do more when your phone runs Windows®
Windows Mobile

See it all at StartDoingMore.com Start Doing More

Start doing more
Get More Done with Windows Mobile

There's so much more you can do when your phone runs Windows. StartDoingMore.com>

Familiar Microsoft Software and Services

With a Windows Mobile phone, your easy-to-use Microsoft software go wherever you go.

Choose the perfect phone for you

Side, flip, qwerty, touchscreen? See More>

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Research In Motion (0.32%) 0.45 141.16
Dow Jones Industrials (-0.59%) -76.13 12,916.53
S&P 500 (-0.43%) -6.11 1,417.46
NASDAQ (-0.72%) -18.22 2,515.51
CNET TECH (-0.65%) -11.66 1,771.09
  Symbol Lookup
Detroit auto show
Detroit auto show

Detroit auto show
advertisement
On GameFAQs: Grand Theft Auto IV (PS3) cheats & more!
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: