Only Hypori Halo addresses the biggest telework work issue the pentagon faces: Trust

Only Hypori Halo addresses the biggest telework work issue the pentagon faces: Trust

Hypori enables Army personnel remote access to Army’s secure NIPR environment from their personal devices. Image courtesy of Hypori.



The U.S. military is in the midst of a seminal transition to a fully digital infrastructure. The shift will affect the way it fights and works, helping it capitalize both on the power of information and the opportunity to strategically disperse while staying connected. But the gains our armed forces make from this transition will only be realized if the remote systems underpinning it can be trusted.


Hypori Halo enables military personnel to securely use their own edge devices – mobile phones, tablet and iPads – to work from anywhere, increasing productivity and mission execution while collaborating with their colleagues and their chain-of-command. It’s an application that users can download from the Apple App Store or Google Play in minutes.


Hypori Halo is central to the U.S. Army’s Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) program and it’s the only cloud access system which can be fully trusted by the Pentagon and by its users.


Bring Your Own


Telework ballooned across the private sector during the Pandemic and America’s Armed Forces followed suit. The Pentagon turned to a commercial solution for the vastly expanded remote work it believed was necessary to continue to function, enabling Microsoft Office 365 mobile capability for the military/civilian workforce. The capability was well received but in the span of less than a year DoD recognized it wasn’t secure the way it was configured. In June, 2021 Office 365 mobile capability was turned off.


But the military’s need for telework has remained stron ..

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