rohit: well, with the approach -- cory: i'm sorry, go ahead. rohit: there is something different.ou mentioned, where it is being stored on the device and the fact that there is a physical separation makes a difference in how exploitable it is. there is a difference from your standard devices. cory: i also wonder, rohit, if the market share or lack therof makes the device more secure. why would someone go after a device that has less than half percent market share? rohit: that's actually a very valid point. when you hear about public disclosures of security by security researchers, they are either volunteering their time or are paid to find security issues and hardware or software. what they will do is typically find their time focused on things that do have a lot of market share. from a mobile apps perspective they will spend a lot of time with your ios and android devices. it is hard to say without the same amount of scrutiny what level of security and other platform will have. cory: go ahead, christoph. christoph: blackberry is in the hands of leaders of state -- vice presidents