Bangladesh's government, military, and crisis command institutions need three things to operate securely: communications that cannot be intercepted, a way to command every agency during a crisis in seconds, and total control over every device that touches classified information. DigiSec BD delivers all three — built on BlackBerry technology trusted by NATO and 20+ governments worldwide.
Every call and message between your command staff — encrypted end-to-end, cryptographically verified, with zero dependency on foreign infrastructure.
Reach every agency, unit, and official in seconds during a national emergency. Know who is safe, who has responded, and who needs help — in real time.
Total lifecycle control over every device that touches classified data. Remote wipe, app control, compliance monitoring — from a single console.
These are consumer applications, built for the general public — not for state secrets. They are owned by foreign companies, store data on foreign servers, and are legally accessible to foreign governments under their own laws, regardless of what happens in Bangladesh.
They were never audited against military or intelligence-grade threats. No independent body has certified them to resist a nation-state adversary. Metadata — who you called, when, from where — is visible to the network operator even when the message itself is "encrypted."
A single compromised consumer app account has exposed senior government officials elsewhere in the world. Bangladesh's leadership communications deserve the same level of protection as any NATO member state — not the same app a teenager uses to chat with friends.
Building encryption is easy. Proving it cannot be broken is the hard part — and that proof can only come from independent, adversarial testing by certification bodies whose entire job is trying to break cryptographic systems.
A homegrown system has no NATO clearance, no NSA approval, no FIPS 140-2 validation, no public track record. No one outside your own team has ever tried to break it — which means no one knows if it can be broken, until an adversary already has.
An unaudited, self-built system is precisely the kind of target foreign intelligence services look for first: untested, unproven, and built without the decades of adversarial hardening that certified systems have survived. Certification is not bureaucracy. It is the only evidence a system has actually been attacked and held.
Sovereign does not mean “built by us.” Sovereign means deployed on our soil, under our control, with data that never leaves our borders — powered by technology that has already passed the world’s most demanding, adversarial security testing.
That is precisely what BlackBerry’s certifications represent:
NIAP & Common Criteria, BSI Certification, FedRAMP Class D (High), NSA CSfC, NATO Restricted, FIPS 140‑2/140‑1, and independent validation from bodies such as the Fraunhofer Institute — approvals no single nation can replicate alone.
And that is what DigiSec BD deploys for Bangladesh: sovereign, government‑grade secure communications built on globally verified security, operated entirely under national authority.
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