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Tuesday, 02/16/2016 7:28:44 PM

Tuesday, February 16, 2016 7:28:44 PM

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Pump and Dump July 30, 2015 - SmallCap Network has been compensated $30,000 in cash and 600,000 shares of restricted stock by SecureCom Mobile for market awareness and other advertising services on SCQBF. The stock has since reversed split and now represents 150,000 shares of restricted stock.

http://www.smallcapnetwork.com/Disclosure/s/page/view/p/mid/1/id/4/


http://www.smallcapnetwork.com/NowSecure-Report-Puts-SecureCom-Mobile-in-the-Spotlight/s/via/1789/article/view/p/mid/3/id/748/

NowSecure Report Puts SecureCom Mobile in the Spotlight
Despite all the chatter, research, and certifications aimed at mobile security, they all point back to just how much we need a SecureCom Mobile Inc. (OTCMKTS:SCQBF).
By Bryan Murphy
Feb 16, 2016 1:55:34 PM PST | No Comment(s) - Post a Comment Rating
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SCQBF $0.18 $0.00 0.00%

Bryan Murphy

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It's official. Your mobile device is a ticking mobile security time-bomb. Last week, mobile security outfit NowSecure published its 2016 "State of Mobile Security" address, and things are not looking good. It - and the creation of yet another job certification - underscores just how much opportunity SecureCom Mobile Inc. (OTCMKTS:SCQBF) may offer to current and prospective SCQBF shareholders.

First things first. the NowSecure report identified a couple dozen key areas of weakness for their mobile connectivity corporations as well individuals may want to shore up. The statistics that put those areas in focus, however, were jaw-dropping.

Case in point? A full 25% of 400,000 apps reviewed by NowSecure to produce the report were found to have at least one security flaw. Some of the more popular apps (as indicted by more than a million downloads) were found to expose things like phone numbers and call logs... "leaky apps". Perhaps worse, of the Android devices themselves that were studied, more than 80% of them were determined to be exposed to at least one of the top 25 mobile security flaws NowSecure found.

Though no single tool can shore up every mobile security flaw, SecureCom Mobile can certainly knock one of the big ones over... the flaw that may not even be found on your mobile device. That flaw? The ease with which a nefarious third party could intercept and listen in on your phone calls, and read your text messages.

Simply put, SecureCom has devised a way to scramble a digital message like a text, phone call, or even an attached document so that it's only unscrambled when it arrives at the intended recipient's device. Yes, it takes some technical doing, but SecureCom can even encrypt a two-way conversation between two parties using the highest level of encryption possible, and using completely transparent open-source software. These encryption tools are available as a download for Apple, Google, and even BlackBerry smartphones and tablets, and can safely communicate with unlike devices (devices running different operating systems).

Better still, while the encryption of conversations and text messages keeps those communications private, where the SCQBF platform truly stands out is that the decryption keys used for each communication session are destroyed after the session ends. Each new conversation or text uses a new encryption key, making the platform even more secure.

In short, it's probably the most potent and useful mobile security/encryption app yet, filling in the biggest security gap your smartphone may have without you even knowing it.

And there are plenty of supporting statistics to underscore the need for the types of mobile security measures SCQBF has developed and will soon be marketing in a major way:

Cisco research suggest that 51% of users regularly connect to unsecured networks using their smartphones.
Mobile security company Wandera recently found 16 companies, with a combined 500,000 daily users, weren't encrypting credit card payment data being sent to those companies.
The global mobile security market should reach $34.8 billion by the year 2020.

Along the same lines of underscoring just how critical the need for better mobile security is, a new type of professional certification has been created for Credentialed Mobile Device Security Professional certificate IT professionals to use as a qualification and credential - the, or CMDSP.

Created by Baltimore-based Mobile Resource Group, the CMDSP points to just how dire the need has become, and how seriously the IT staffing industry must take the threat.

The few credentials that do directly address mobile security are vendor-specific and usually aimed at a particular mobile platforms, or at a specific security solutions that offer a mobile device management component. The Credentialed Mobile Device Security Professional, on the other hand, is a vendor-neutral certification, suggesting the challenge needs to be addressed in an overarching way rather than just on a case-by-case basis.

It's a step in the right direction, though nobody actually believes the industry will ever get to a highly secure state. That's what we've got SecureCom Mobile for... to fill in one of the bigger gaps.

For more on SecureCom Mobile, visit the company website here.

Bryan Murphy is a paid contributor of the SmallCap Network. Bryan Murphy's personal holdings should be disclosed above. You can also view SmallCap Network's complete disclaimer and disclosure.

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