| By Euan Rocha    and Sinead Carew (Reuters) - Samsung    Electronics Co Ltd is close to signing a deal to sell its popular line of    Galaxy devices to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, sources familiar    with the situation said on Friday. The deal would be a boost    for Samsung, which is increasingly seeking to cater to the needs of    government agencies, a niche long dominated by Canadian smartphone maker    BlackBerry Ltd. The FBI, with more than    35,000 employees, at present uses mainly BlackBerry devices. It is unclear    whether the agency plans to replace all BlackBerry equipment with Galaxy    models or whether it will use hardware from both companies. A spokeswoman for the FBI    declined to comment on the matter, saying that the selection of its new    smartphones is part of an active acquisition process and any current    discussions are proprietary to the government. The imminent deal was    initially reported by the Wall Street Journal late on Thursday. The WSJ also    said Samsung is close to signing a smaller order for its devices with the    U.S. Navy, citing people familiar with the matter. Representatives of    BlackBerry and Samsung declined to comment. BlackBerry emphasized, however,    that it regards its operating system as the best in the market in terms of security    features. "The security of    mobile devices is more important now than it has ever been before,"    BlackBerry's chief legal officer, Steve Zipperstein, said in an interview.    "It is fair to ask why in this context anyone would consider moving from    the gold standard in security, which is the BlackBerry platform." In May, the U.S. Pentagon    cleared Samsung's Android mobile devices and a new line of BlackBerry devices    powered by the BB10 operating system for use on Defense Department networks. Samsung has been pushing    hard to convince government agencies and corporate clients that its Galaxy    devices, powered by Google Inc's Android operating system, can meet their    stringent security needs. The South Korean company    hopes that the Pentagon clearance and the imminent deal with the FBI will    help boost sales to security-conscious clients including banks and law firms. SKEPTICS REMAIN Some analysts remain    sceptical about whether Android can meet all security requirements of such    clients, and note that the FBI itself has highlighted some vulnerabilities of    the platform. "The Android    operating system hasn't been secured properly," said Rob Enderle,    principal analyst with Enderle Group, noting that Samsung has layered    technology on top of the operating system in an attempt to make its Galaxy    devices safer. "If you are going to    tackle security, you kind of have to do it throughout the entire platform.    It's not that Samsung doesn't want to - it is that they don't own the    operating system so they cannot," said Enderle. "If you're going to    sell into government, you have to be able to provide a secure solution and    Android isn't it yet." Enderle and other    analysts also say that since Android security is not end-to-end managed by a    single entity, this can create more vulnerabilities and prove more costly. The FBI's move to explore    other platforms is also garnering some concern in political circles in the    United States. U.S. Representative Kenny    Marchant of Texas said in a letter to the FBI that he believes the agency    ought to use mobile devices that do not rely on disparate technologies that    would create additional security vulnerabilities. "I understand that    the FBI may be considering a new solution that is a patchwork of technologies    stitched together," Marchant said in the letter, which was obtained by    Reuters. "I am concerned that this approach may prove to be more costly    than other alternatives." (Reporting by Euan Rocha    in Toronto and Sinead Carew in New York; editing by Matthew Lewis) | 
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