Armour Comms announces Audit and Archive solution, Recall by Armour

Private Cloud’ audit and archive solution provides regulatory compliance for secure calls while preserving confidentiality and privacy of sensitive information  

 

London, UK, 18 January 2022Armour Comms has announced the availability of Recall By Armour, an archiving and auditing solution for its secure communications products.  Delivered as a secure service hosted on a private cloud, Recall by Armour solves the compliance conundrum of keeping sensitive calls secure, and still making the content available for audit purposes should the need arise. Communications that take place via Armour Mobile including messages, attachments and audio, are captured in their entirety within a centralised audit log, which can then be reviewed by authenticated auditors subject to strict security parameters. Recall, a proven service already used by several government departments, is designed specifically for organisations and enterprises in regulated industries such as financial services, legal and healthcare.

 

Recall by Armour directly addresses the issues of unofficial channels (such as consumer-grade apps like WhatsApp) being used for business or ministerial communications by providing an equally usable app, that has enterprise features such as:

  • Centralised audit log
  • All transmitted media (text, attachments and audio) are archived
  • Tightly managed authorisation for audit access
  • Individual encryption key for each user (limits auditor access according to investigative need)
  • All access to audit files is itself audited

 

David Holman, Director at Armour Comms said; “One of the key reasons that many organisations use Armour Mobile is to maintain complete privacy and security of communications. However, in regulated industries, audit and archive capabilities are required to preserve evidence, and in the case of government, to respond to Freedom of Information requests. Providing the option for an auditor to access sensitive calls is in itself a security management conundrum for competitors, but is directly addressed with Recall by Armour.”

 

This latest development from Armour Comms comes hot on the heels of the technology preview of Unity by Armour, which was showcased at DSEI 2021.  Unity works in conjunction with Armour Mobile extending its capabilities with secure video conferencing calls including new security features to combat the issues of ‘zoom-bombing’ and ghost (i.e. uninvited) callers who may eavesdrop on sensitive conversations.

JPMorgan fined $200m for mis-use of WhatsApp

JPMorgan Securities has agreed to pay $200 million in fines over issues related to employees’ ‘widespread’ use of unapproved communications methods like WhatsApp.  Two US regulators, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, found that employees had been discussing business matters outside of approved channels.  More details here: https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/17/jpmorgan-agrees-to-125-million-fine-for-letting-employees-use-whatsapp-to-evade-regulators.html

$200m is a heavy price for any organisation to pay, not to mention the reputational damage.  In addition, those individuals who get caught using non-approved methods of communication, could stand to lose their jobs as well.

Traders losing their jobs

This is the latest in a series of high profile cases where communicating via social media apps (such as WhatsApp) has resulted in senior personnel losing their jobs.  In October 2021, Morgan Stanley’s most senior commodities traders departed after the firm discovered they had been using WhatsApp and had failed to supervise the use of communications within the commodities team. Whilst no wrong-doing has been found, it reflects Wall Street’s continued clampdown on communications channels that it cannot monitor.  Federal law requires financial firms to keep meticulous records of electronic messages between brokers and clients so regulators can make sure those firms aren’t skirting anti-fraud or antitrust laws.

Armour has the answer

Armour provides an alternative to WhatsApp that is every bit as convenient and easy to use.  Armour Mobile has many additional security features (there’s more to security than simply end-to-end encryption – although that is important), such as:

  • centrally managed communities – so users know that they are communicating with genuine, authenticated contacts – dramatically reducing the chance of deep fake scams;
  • no requirement to use a personal cell phone number – any unique identifier can be used, safeguarding staff against having to divulge their personal numbers to colleagues;
  • enterprise fast and secure provisioning for new users via one-time use QR codes.

As well as these superior security features, and broad functionality that covers voice, video, messaging, group chat and conferencing, Armour Mobile also has Archive and Audit capabilities making it compliant with industry regulations and GDPR.

Recall by Armour – Archive and Audit capabilities

Armour Mobile and Armour Desktop support an additional module of the Armour product range that provides audit capability enabling its secure communications (messages, attachments and audio) to be captured in their entirety within the centralised audit system, allowing retrospective analysis of all conversations.  Each entry within the audit system is stored in its original, fully encrypted form, protecting it as securely as when it was transmitted over-the-air.  The decrypted content can only be retrieved when an auditor with sufficient privileges has access to the Recall audit tools, to the audit records, and has been given access to the key material relating to the specific user to be audited, allowing the auditor to perform the necessary decryption tasks.

Here are the key points:

  • With an on-premises installation, the Armour system can be set up to support a centralised audit record that will enable the details of every message, attachment and audio call to be securely stored for later review.
  • All transmitted media (text, attachments and audio) are archived in the audit database.
  • Authorised access to audit records requires an auditor to request the encryption keys for a specific user from an administrator who has sufficient rights to provide these keys.
  • All access to audit files are themselves audited to provide a full history of events.
  • In order to review calls, auditors require access to a special set of Armour Recall audit tools.

 

For more information about how Armour Comms can help your organisation avoid the risk of crippling fines and reputational damage by using an enterprise secure communications system that includes archiving sensitive conversations.

Contact us today: sales@armourcomms.com

Five Gold Rings – The Hidden Gems within Armour Mobile

In these days when there is an app for just about everything, we’ve all grown used to downloading new software.  We expect to be able to use the app in question immediately for whatever it was that we first wanted it for.  But how often do we look at the detail, or explore what else the software can do?

Some geeky types do, but most of us just want to get on with our day, and we may well be missing out on some cool features that would save us time.

So, our geeky types have got together to provide edited highlights of the best ‘hidden gems’ within Armour Mobile and SigNet by Armour that could make your day a bit easier.

Contact Management Features

Armour Mobile includes several features to help with contact and list management.  Whether you want to set up a group for a one-off chat, set up a project group for on-going calls, or share contact details with a group, here are a couple of tips that will save you time.

A quick way to share contacts – using the paperclip

You can share contacts via message chat or by selecting export contacts and sharing as a message (if you still have the original contacts file stored within Armour Mobile).

While in the Message facility for both 1-to-1 and group chats it is possible to quickly send either individual contact details or a file of contact details to everyone in the chat session. Simply click on the paperclip icon at the bottom left-hand corner of the screen and select ‘Send Contact File’ or ‘Share Contacts’. If you select ‘Share Contacts’ you are presented with your contacts list from which you can select one or more contacts.  There are a couple of options, here.  You can either click on each entry you wish to share, or click on the box in the top right hand corner to select all contacts, you can then deselect people from the list (sometimes this will be quicker depending on how many contacts you wish to share).

When you have selected the contacts click on ‘Share’ at the bottom right-hand corner of the screen.  Once ‘Share’ has been clicked a new entry is shown in your message timeline, which summarises how many contacts your are sharing (good to check it is actually the number that you are expecting). Then click ‘Send’ to share with everyone in the conversation.

Export contacts to import later – for a new device or to set up a specific sub-group

You can export contacts as a file that can then be imported later on. This is useful for a new device or to set up a new group for a specific call, or an ongoing project.

A file of contacts can be created by selecting the ‘Settings’ option and then selecting ‘Contacts’ and from there selecting ‘Export Contacts’.  Your entire Contacts List is then displayed and you can use the buttons down the right hand side of the screen to select those entries you wish to include in the file (alternatively, click the box in the top right hand corner to select everyone, and then deselect any that you do not want). Choose the default option ‘Save to device’ and click on ‘Export’ in the top right-hand corner of the screen.

To protect all the sensitive details held in the Contacts file it’s essential to enter a high quality password to protect the file. Enter a password and then enter it again to confirm, then click on OK. The file is now saved with the name being the current date and time, for example: 2021-12-07-16-34.

Message Burn in Group Chat

As well as setting the Message Burn feature to delete messages after a set period of time for chats with individuals, it can also be used for group chats too, which saves time and is more secure.

In a group chat, at the bottom left-hand corner of the screen, just above where you type in new messages there is a small calendar+clock icon with the text ‘Message Burn: Never’. Click on the text to allow messages for the entire group to be deleted after a configurable period of time. This could be a number of days, hours or minutes.  Message Burn can be timed from when the message was read, or when the message was sent, and it can be applied to a single message or to all messages sent to the group.

‘Scan text’ facility in iOS 15

For those using an iOS 15 device, briefly touch the cursor in the text entry field and this will then display the text ‘Scan Text’. Touch this text and then the camera is triggered to enable you to use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) to scan text into a message.  This is a native feature of iOS 15 which we’ve included within Armour Mobile to provide a convenient and fast means of inputting text into a message.

Note to Self feature in SigNet

SigNet by Armour, our alternative product line to Armour Mobile, has a Note to Self feature which gets rave reviews from those that use it.  If you’ve woken up in the middle of the night with a brainwave, or think of something while in a meeting, send a note to yourself with SigNet. Simply go to the ‘Chats’ section – select from the bottom of the screen, and click on the ‘Note to Self’ option.  From here you can send yourself a message, either in text, as a recording or a photo. The note will also appear on any connected devices, including your Windows desktop.

Time to make cybersecurity personal

It’s been a tough 18 months for everyone, and as things start to get back to some semblance of normal in the UK at least, many people are enjoying a bit of down time.  Some are playing PCR bingo and going abroad, while others are stay-cationing.

When staff are in holiday mood – will they throw caution to the wind?

While relaxing on holiday, will your employees remember your security protocols?  The harsh answer is probably not!  It’s not just the corporate information stored on personal mobile devices, or business devices that are also used for personal use, that could be compromised, it is their own personal privacy.

With the spectre of mobile network roaming charges (due to UK leaving the EU), some people may choose to use standard voice calls to keep costs down, but these easy for hackers, malicious actors (eg. business competitors) or foreign network carriers to intercept.

When taking business devices abroad, how does your organisation manage the export controls of taking data overseas?

On a personal level, will staff remember not to access their banking apps over an untrusted (hotel) Wi-Fi connection?

There’s a lot to think about – especially when people are fatigued by security measures in their working lives that can make getting ‘the job done’ that bit more laborious.

Personal Privacy is being infringed – Every day

Enlightened self-interested is as big a motivator as any to get people to follow corporate policy.  When it comes to personal privacy versus what some describe as the surveillance state, many people are of the opinion that if you’ve done nothing wrong, you’ve nothing to fear.  Recent stories in the press highlight the error in that thinking.

One such story to hit the headlines concerns Pegasus spyware manufactured by Israeli company NSO that is for sale to governments and other organisations for the purposes of surveillance.  A data leak revealed how the spyware has been used to target journalists, human rights activists, politicians, government officials and business executives around the world. A list of 50,000 mobile phone numbers of potential targets has been uncovered.

This is one example of a ‘list’ that no one wants to be on. There are other databases of mobile phone numbers that people are not aware they are listed in.  A recent BBC article told about how the reporter received a call via WhatsApp from someone she didn’t know.  The caller had got her number from a database held in the US (there are many companies collecting and monetising personal data, scraped from a variety of online sources which allowed someone to link her WhatsApp account and personal phone number).

Live Facial Recognition (LFR) – is now a reality, and so concerning that UK Information Commissioner, Elizabeth Denham recently voiced her concerns about the technology. When CCTV cameras are overlaid with LFR, for instance, in a shopping centre, it could be used for identifying known shoplifters, or for serving up personalised adverts to shoppers.  Safety or an invasion of privacy?

Another story to hit the more technical journals is news that Apple is to introduce new scanning software to detect Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) on people’s iPhones.  No one would argue that cracking down on the peddling of CSAM and the apprehension of paedophiles is anything but a good thing. However, in this case, the method is being called into question because it introduces a security and privacy weakness in Apple’s operating system, that previously enjoyed a robust reputation. It doesn’t take a huge leap of imagination to see how this type of well-meaning surveillance could be appropriated for more political or sinister purposes.  Indeed, there has been such a degree of public outcry that Apple has now announced it is deferring the launch of the service.

Corporate Duty of Care

Infringements of personal privacy can impact business. Most people are wedded to their mobile phones, making these devices a tempting and lucrative attack vector. Not only may perpetrators be able to steal the user’s identity, they may also gain valuable commercial information, or indeed, that might be the very reason for the attack in the first place.  It is in the interest of any organisation to educate and protect its employees.

Products such as Armour Mobile and SigNet by Armour are delightfully easy to use, and yet provide a much higher level of security than consumer-grade apps.

In today’s world of increasing surveillance, anyone who handles sensitive or commercially valuable information on their mobile phone, needs to consider protecting it, and with that, their own privacy.

 

Contact us today to see how we can help your organisation protect your employees personal privacy and with it, your corporate IP.

 

Protect Privacy and Protect your Brand

Security of data has long been an issue for organisations around the world. Pundits say it’s not a matter of IF but WHEN any given company will suffer a data breach or attack. As catastrophic as it may be at the time, businesses do survive data breaches, despite the damning headlines and the punitive fines.  Notable examples are British Airways and Marriott Hotels.  British Airways was fined £20m by the ICO for a data breach that took place in 2018, and in the last couple of weeks BA has announced that they have now settled compensation claims: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-57734946

Similarly Marriott Hotels was fined £18.4m for a breach that involved over 500m data files.

While both brands are in the travel industry, which is suffering due to the pandemic, neither saw a notable downturn in consumer sentiment toward them as a result of the breaches. Both have apologised to customers and put measures in place to mitigate further risks.

The Embarrassment Factor

What really kills a business is when something is leaked that is toe-curlingly embarrassing.  Something that cuts to the core of brand values, shows an organisation as dishonest, or not respecting their customers or the general public.  Depending on your age, the famous Ratner moment may spring to mind.  This is when Gerard Ratner claimed that the Ratners high street chain of jewellery stores sold ‘crap’. Previously loyal customers felt under-valued and taken for fools.  They deserted the brand in droves, the business lost significant sales and had to completely rebrand.

PA Consulting lost major government contracts as a result of losing an un-encrypted USB stick containing details of 84,000 prisoners. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7575989.stm

More recently, the Tory government, and Boris Johnson in particular, took a knocking when disgruntled ex-Spad (special advisor), Dominic Cummings decided to dish the dirt. He had the saved WhatsApp messages to prove his point.  (Ex-employees that take sensitive WhatsApp conversations with them is another demonstration of why consumer-grade apps should not be used in business – the organisation can’t control the data https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/jul/19/dominic-cummings-tells-bbc-that-pm-denied-covid-would-overwhelm-nhs)

Protecting Privacy

Protecting your employees’ individual privacy, and the commercially sensitive and valuable information that they may keep on their mobile devices is a very good reason to use a secure comms app such as those offered by Armour.  Depending on your job, losing data can be inconvenient if it needs to be retrieved, costly if it is of a commercial nature and results in lost sales, extremely costly if it is intellectual property or trade secrets, or, if you are someone from the covert/intelligence services world, a journalist, aid worker or activist working in an unfriendly regime, it can be life threatening.

Protecting the privacy of your customers or citizens is equally important, particularly, as we have just discussed, to protect the brand value and public image of your organisation. Quite apart from the requirements of GDPR, protecting personally identifiable data is a worthy goal in its own right, as the distress and inconvenience its loss could cause an individual is immeasurable.

How a Secure Comms App can help

Providing an app like Armour® Mobile, or SigNet by Armour®, for your employees to use for business conversations, be they voice, video, conference or messaging, or sharing sensitive documents, helps employees to become more security aware. The apps have great usability (something our UX designers have worked hard on), so there is no learning curve to get people to use them, ensuring swift user adoption by the user community. The organisation is in full control of its data, and when an employee leaves, their account can be deleted, along with all of the data held in their account.

Using an enterprise-grade secure comms app sets the tone, and leads by example, so that employees understand that data security and data privacy is something that needs to be taken very seriously. It protects your staff, protects their privacy, the privacy of your customers, and ultimately may save your brand from an embarrassing ‘disgruntled ex-employee dishes the dirt’ moment.

For more information about how Armour Comms can help your organisation to keep control of your data and protect privacy, contact us today or view our latest podcast below.

Our Latest Podcast – Privacy V Security: https://youtu.be/IeeBvl2XJAc

Reflections from DSEI – Secure Comms are gaining ground

Back from DSEI, and time for reflection on our first face to face, in the real world event in nearly two years. A lot has changed, and not just pandemic-related working patterns.  Since we were last at DSEI there has been a sea change in perception about the necessity for secure communications.  There is a growing understanding of why people need controlled, secure apps for business/work/official comms and why consumer grade apps, like WhatsApp (and others) are simply not suitable.  This article in the New York Post is the latest in a string of news stories on why WhatsApp is not as private and secure as Facebook would have us believe: https://nypost.com/2021/09/07/facebook-reads-and-shares-whatsapp-private-messages-report/

As the world reopens for business it needs trusted communications across untrusted networks

Talking to a wide range of people at DSEI has confirmed what we believed to be the case from many conversations we’ve had in recent months.  While working from home people have been using tools like Teams and Zoom, which they are now used to. Organisations know that such tools are not really secure enough, but they’ve mitigated a lot of the risk with processes and additional technology, because while people are working from home, the network is a known entity, even if not totally trusted.

However, as the world starts to open up once more, people are moving to hybrid and remote working, which means a return to airport lounges, coffee shops, shared offices, and anywhere that there is a WiFi connection.  Working from a myriad of different locations also means a return to dynamic untrusted and unknown networks in a landscape where threats have evolved and perpetrators are two years more savvy.

Unlike the start of the pandemic, where lockdown was sudden and IT departments scrambled to keep staff productive by any means possible, the return to more normal working can be planned, which means ensuring people have the appropriate tools for the job.  This includes a professional, enterprise-suitable, secure comms solution.

Armour Comms has the answer

Working with our strategic partners at Qinetiq, Amiosec, Bittium and Samsung, Armour Comms is able to provide a broad range of solutions suitable for many different use cases including those with higher assurance requirements.

One of our customers is currently deploying Armour Mobile across several operational and office areas to replace the use of consumer grade apps.  Our NATO approved solution now includes unique Secure Push technology from Bittium, allowing secure and battery efficient signalling of Armour Mobile calls and messages via classified networks without requiring connectivity to the public internet. This ensures that voice and video conversations, and the associated files and attachments stay completely private, no matter how hostile the environment, all the while providing a user experience to match consumer-grade apps.

On show for the first time was Unity by Armour, which works in conjunction with Armour Mobile to provide secure video conferencing calls (pre-defined or on-the-fly), screen sharing and integration with secure chat groups. The extension to our offerings enabling secure collaboration was extremely well received highlighting the growing requirement for enterprise secure video conferencing. In addition to our existing one-to-one secure audio and video calling Unity by Armour provides picture in picture and multiple screens, and offers a familiar video conferencing interface, making it easy and intuitive to use. Available with a choice of hosting options, which includes on-premises installation, communities are controlled by invitation-only, increasing security and guarding against ‘zoom-bombing’.

For more information about the importance of Secure Conferencing view our podcast on the topic here: https://youtu.be/Mrj9iaPedSI

Secure-by-default communications to power productive collaboration

The importance of a good user experience can’t be overstated. If secure solutions are difficult to use, clunky and irksome, people will simply resort to other less secure methods often via un-managed and unsecure ‘shadow IT’.  A secure comms app needs to be easy enough to use for everyday business communications allowing users to be productive and collaborate without friction. People don’t want to differentiate between what should be a ‘secure call’ and a conversation that can be had over ‘normal’ channels, and nor should they have to.  Armour Comms solves the conundrum of a secure-by-default comms application that is still easy to use and quick to deploy at scale.

Contact us today for a trial 

Safety Detectives: Q & A With Armour Communications

Safety Detectives: Please share your company background, how you got started, and your mission?

Armour Communications: Armour Communications was founded in 2015, by directors David Holman and Andy Lilly. They recognized that there was a need for more robust mobile communications solutions for enterprises. All organizations, in every sector, of every size, both public sector and commercial, have sensitive data to protect. (Examples of these are: intellectual property, price lists, customer lists, formulae, commercial agreements, merger/acquisition/valuation data, personally sensitive/identifiable information, information relating to personal or national security)…

Click here to read the full interview:  https://www.safetydetectives.com/blog/qa-with-armour-communications/

 

Armour Comms’ new partnership with GEM-TELCO supports secure communications solutions for government customers globally

Armour’s secure mobile communications solution now available as part of GEM-TELCO’s flagship International Traffic Audit Platform (IAP)

London, UK, 7 October 2021: Armour Comms, the leading provider of secure communications solutions, has announced a new partnership with GEM-TELCO, specialists in telecommunications projects globally. GEM-TELCO is using Armour Mobile within the organisation to secure its internal communications and sensitive business information on projects with its executive management team and its global agents. Having used Armour Mobile successfully within the business, GEM-TELCO has now incorporated the solution within its flagship service International Traffic Audit Platform (IAP), which offers a telecom data and voice traffic monitoring system for governments and regulators.

GEM-TELCO selected Armour Mobile for its true end-to-end encryption capability, certified by NATO and for its ability to be installed on a user’s existing phone, removing the need for a special encrypted device. Armour Mobile’s user interface is easy to use for texts, voice, video and conference calls, encouraging user adoption. The solution can be hosted on local premises, providing a closed community that offers complete control of all activity, data and calls.

João Inácio, Chief Technical Officer at GEM-TELCO commented; “Armour Mobile provides us with an excellent secure communications solution that is device agnostic, easy to use and to manage. We work with many government clients offering our secure communications monitoring service and datacentres, all within one managed platform. Armour Mobile provides an extra layer of confidence in both our own internal operations and our service offerings to ensure that sensitive information exchanges have additional security to protect against external threats.”

GEM-TELCO’s IAP is a telecommunication transit platform, a single point of audit, that collects all international voice, data and signalling traffic combined and is equipped with a switching, billing, auditing and controlling platform. It covers all international telecom services via satellite, cable and/or optic fibre.

The IAP platform detects and provides statistics for both TDM and/or digital telecommunication services as well as international electronic exchange traffic. The platform also has the ability to provide all the necessary information regarding the country’s intelligence services for cyber security.

Dave Holman, Director at Armour Comms said; “This new partnership with GEM-TELCO aligns our complementary secure communications solutions for customers whose sensitive information needs to be protected. Armour Mobile provides transparent communication within a secure, private environment, while GEM-TELCO’s platform monitors and manages sensitive traffic and audit information for governments and telecommunications regulators at the highest levels. By offering Armour Mobile as part of its technology platform, and using it themselves for internal communications, GEM-TELCO ensures that it offers a secure and robust framework for all customer communications.”

For more information on Armour Mobile, please visit: www.armourcomms.com

Samsung, Targus and Armour Comms partner to deliver powerful secure mobile computing using DeX to replace laptops

New collaboration brings secure communications to enterprises to seamlessly support remote working with enhanced user experience

 

London, 30 September 2021: Armour Comms, the leading provider of specialist, secure communications solutions, has announced a partnership with Samsung Electronics and Targus to enable enterprises to harness the power of smartphones for extended business use. The combined offering will provide enterprises with a solution to support secure home working, on enterprise-level Samsung Galaxy Android smartphones, utilising the power of Armour Mobile and a Targus DeX USB-C phone dock – as an alternative to laptops. Designed with the end-user in mind employees will be able work remotely with a desktop feel, with Armour Mobile providing fully integrated secure communications for voice, video, messaging, conferencing and associated data files.

The Targus DeX USB-C phone dock allows users to power their phone and connect to an external HDMI display, peripherals such as mice and keyboards, an ethernet cable and an SD card, and work on their Galaxy smartphone as though on a laptop. Armour Mobile provides secure handling of mobile communications ensuring that business information within the app is kept securely, and data privacy regulations such as GDPR are maintained.

David Holman, Director, Armour said, “The last year has seen a seismic shift in how and where employees work. As organisations plan what the working environment of the future will look like, Armour is committed to working with our partners such as Samsung and Targus to provide a flexible answer to enable employees and teams to collaborate securely, how and where they want.”

Armour Mobile has been optimised to provide a seamless desktop-like user experience on Samsung DeX devices with the Targus USB-C phone dock. Armour Mobile delivers:

  • secure communications with a ‘desktop’ feel via the Samsung smartphone removing the need for every employee to be issued with a corporate laptop
  • sensitive business information held is protected wherever an employee needs to work
  • data is controlled and protected ensuring GDPR compliance

 

A spokesperson from Samsung Electronics, said “The Samsung DeX platform enables people to use their smartphone as a computer, something which has become increasingly important during COVID-driven lockdowns. Our innovations are empowering people to work safely and have enabled organisations to keep vital business operations going wherever their employees have been working. Our collaboration with Armour and Targus brings another innovation to the market ensuring communications are secure and that solutions can be implemented quickly and simply.”

David Brown, Marketing Director, Targus, said, “Targus is global partner of the Samsung Mobile Accessory Partnership Programme and has recently been appointed to support the Samsung Mobile ecosystem of devices as a Global Tier 1 Partner and DeX Accessory Partner. This new partnership with Armour Mobile and Samsung is the next step on this exciting journey as we continue to develop thoughtful products that enable people to work productively from any location.”