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Yes, but that's an entirely different and complicated can of worms.

Due to its 'highly secure nature' it was sought after by individuals within regimes that had known surveillance and BB was way ahead of FB/Google in terms of attention by national powers around the world and having to 'deal with them' - at very least because it was actually used by entities in the first place! One of the drawbacks of Barack Obama using your device is that it's 'front and centre' and 'widely used' by every relevant 'agency' in the world.

It was a hugely difficult issue; hackernews tends to be 'anti state surveillance' in all forms - personally, I'm not as long as there's judicial oversight/applied properly (though sometimes it's not the case even in 'good' regimes) - the fact is basically every country you can think of wanted some type of special deal, the details of which I'm not at liberty to go into sufficed to say it was complicated on every level.

I can say however that Venezuela specifically was never going to get any help from us, and that BB was huge in that country due to it's effective protection from federal sources. Several countries like this were 'big blips' in sales due to the networking effects of this and other things. Penetration of BlackBerry around the world was very irregular, not like other platforms.



> I can say however that Venezuela specifically was never going to get any help from us

Why specifically not Venezuela?




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