Overview
Mobile Electronic Communication Compliance
MobileMandate provides organizations with capabilities to log, archive, review, extract, and supervise electronic communication on mobile devices including text messages, pin to pin, and BlackBerry® Messenger . Our platform instantly provides your organization with the peace of mind that you are in compliance with numerous regulatory agencies.
Compliance isn’t the only reason smart organizations are looking for message archiving and monitoring solutions. Our intuitive user interface provides you with tools and capabilities to find and prevent security issues, data leaks, and improper conduct. No need to worry about backing up your phone for critical communications. With MobileMandate you can find and extract your communications to critical clients sent from a misplaced mobile device.
Device Support
MobileMandate supports BlackBerry® and Windows Mobile 6.0 devices and works with every wireless service provider.
Unlike other solutions which rely entirely on BlackBerry® Enterprise Server logging, MobileMandate must be installed on the device. We do this to guarantee delivery of messages to truly ensure compliance.
Solutions that rely only on BlackBerry® Enterprise Server are prone to error because they rely on continiously polling the device. This inferior design not only drains the device battery but it also allows users to delete sensitive messages before the next polling occurs. BlackBerry® version 4.2 or above comes with Low Memory Manager which automatically deletes messages when storage is low. For more information please see this BlackBerry® Knowledgebase Article
Delivery Model
MobileMandate is delivered using the Software as a Service model. Savvy organizations are choosing this model as their preferred method of software service delivery. There is no expensive hardware to purchase, support, or maintain. We can instantaneously provide you with new features and patches as they become available.
In March, Obama's new CIO -- Vivek Kundra -- made it clear he was a big proponent of SaaS and cloud computing when he said to The Wall Street Journal, "I'm a big believer in disruptive technology. If I went to the coffee shop, I would have more computing power than the police department. Consumers had better technology than the government did. I'm all about the cloud computing notion. I look at my lifestyle, and I want access to information wherever I am. I am killing projects that don't investigate Software as a Service first."