Last year, the Defense Department created similar technology, called Gateway To Virtual Collaboration, to collect its many collaboration tools into one UI. It uses Microsoft's Digital Dashboard and NetMeeting, First Virtual Corp.'s videoconferencing software, and RealNetworks Inc.'s RealPlayer for streaming audio. Microsoft and First Virtual products also included instant messaging. The Defense Department hired Asynchrony to commercialize the gateway product. In return for transferring the intellectual property to Asynchrony and subsidizing development costs, the Defense Department received a license to deploy the commercial product.
Envoke, which recently passed Defense Department security tests, provides authentication of all users and supports HTTPS, which means all files and texts can be encrypted while moving over the Internet. The department plans a wide-scale deployment of Envoke in the next couple of weeks. Within an enterprise, Envoke could boost security for popular instant-messaging software, such as AOL's and Microsoft's. "It's a secure messaging platform," says Weili Su, an analyst at International Data Corp.
Asynchrony raised $750,000 in its first round of funding last year and is seeking up to $1.5 million to commercialize Envoke. Gateway Venture Partners is leading the second round of funding.
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