HMGCC Co-Creation Challenge: NCA seeks emulated phone technology to help combat crime

The National Crime Agency (NCA) seeks emulated phone technology for alias-based communications.

Opportunity Details

When

Registration Opens

10/10/2024

Registration Closes

07/11/2024

Award

An opportunity to work with HMGCC to develop a solution for using emulated phone technology to help combat crime. Funding of up to £60,000 per organisation is available for this sprint with the potential of future funding on successful demonstration of solution viability.

Organisation

UK Government

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About the challenge

This HMGCC Co-Creation challenge, launched on behalf of the NCA, is looking for an emulated phone solution.

Organisations with mid to high Technical Readiness Level (TRL) solutions are invited to apply to support the NCA’s national and international operations in its latest challenge.

The NCA’s mission is to protect the public from serious and organised crime. It operates across the UK and around the world. This requires NCA officers to be able to communicate securely, effectively and dynamically with officers and a range of partners 24/7, 365 days a year. Communications include voice, text, video and picture messaging.

Officers may use multiple aliases and several physical mobile phones to interact with numerous people, protecting their identity and the identity of those with whom they communicate. The NCA wants to reduce the use of physical handsets, in favour of simplifying operations by using a single approved device. The single device should be able to host a series of emulations that can be spun-up and decommissioned rapidly. Due to the sensitivity of some operations, there must be minimal risk of emulation being linked, and any risks should be identified and clearly articulated for the risk owner.

When applying for this challenge, please consider the following questions and how a solution relates to them:

  • Could an officer use your solution to run multiple different aliases, with minimal contagion risk?
  • Can the solution be used within a secure government facility where mobile phones may be prohibited?
  • What are the running costs and maintenance overheads?
  • Does this simplify the users’ experience compared to using multiple non-traceable phones?
  • Would its use look normal for a plain-clothed officer, for example during transit through an airport?
  • Is there a risk of exposing identities within the phonebook?

Example use case

Leo is an operational officer deployed overseas to investigate serious and organised criminals targeting UK victims.

Leo carries with him multiple non-traceable UK issued phones so he can communicate with different suspected criminals as well as law enforcement colleagues, using distinct and separate aliases.

Leo travels successfully through the airport but is aware that carrying multiple phones may look suspicious. Whilst abroad, Leo is on call 24/7 and has the overhead cost of maintaining each phone, as well as the responsibility of ensuring he is using the right phone to contact the right person, using the correct alias. The whole process needs to be streamlined, less subject to risk and benefit from cost savings by reducing the number of phones for each operation.

Leo gives his requirements to Jenny, a technical solutions architect. Jenny identifies a work issued device as a solution which can message physical phones owned by suspected criminals or law enforcement colleagues with minimal risk of digital contagion across each interaction. This would allow Leo to use multiple aliases with reduced maintenance cost and less potential for error. Jenny’s solution is agile and repeatable and can direct calls to officers 24/7, so Leo can use the same device.

Eligibility

This challenge is open to sole innovators, industry, academic and research organisations of all types and sizes. There is no requirement for security clearances.

Solution providers or direct collaboration from countries listed by the UK government under trade sanctions and/or arms embargoes, are not eligible for HMGCC Co-Creation challenges.

Related programme

Innovation Exchange

Innovation Exchange

Innovate UK Innovation Exchange is a cross-sector programme supporting innovation transfer by matching industry challenges to innovative companies from other sectors. It does this by putting large businesses with technical needs in contact with companies who have the right innovative solutions, for faster development of novel solutions.

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