This topic has come up a few times...

http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/tech/article/2013-trend-dual-identity-smartphones/

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 30 — From next year, manufacturers will be
incorporating processors that allow users to separate their business
life from their personal life, or their personal life from their very
personal life.

At September’s BlackBerry Jam event in the US, struggling mobile maker
RIM unveiled a raft of new features for the handset that it hopes will
re-establish the BlackBerry alongside Apple and Samsung, chief among
which was ‘BlackBerry Balance’ — a feature that allows users to keep
their work emails, contacts and apps separate from their personal
lives. Essentially combining two handsets in one device.

Aimed at the growing trend of BYOD (bring your own device — to work),
it was one of the stars of the show and a clear differentiator between
it and its iOS and Android peers.

When the long-awaited new BlackBerry 10 is unveiled in January 2013 it
will be the first to offer this feature, but it won’t stay unique for
long as a number of software and chip developers have been contracted
to develop the same technology for Android phones, and the same
dual-handset feature is expected to start rolling out on LG, Samsung
and Motorola phones before the second half of next year.

And while the intention is to help businesses keep their data secure
when letting employees use their own smartphones for work, if the
latest smartphone user surveys are to be believed, it could have
another more widespread use — for keeping secrets from partners.

According to research by BullGuard, published in November, one in five
UK men has a secret email account they use for hiding correspondence
from their partner, and 5 per cent have gone as far as buying a second
smartphone for fear of their partner snooping on their messages and
photos.

A similar study in the US from Virgin Mobile Live found that 20 per
cent of married people said they felt uncomfortable giving their phone
to their partner and 44 per cent of women admitted to going through
their partner’s phone behind their backs. — AFP/Relaxnews

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