Although the movie industry has lobbied federal legislators to pass the so-called Hollings Bill--which would require technology manufacturers to embed copy-control technologies in future products, an effort that many technology leaders oppose--Valenti insisted that there's no war between the two camps. Taking opposing sides, he said, would prevent both industries from taking advantage of what he described as a multibillion-dollar market opportunity to deliver films and other forms of rich media over the Web. "Going to war is not only a waste, but it never concludes the way you want," Valenti said.
But IT leaders aren't going to be eager to move quickly until they're sure they'll get their fair share of whatever business model emerges, says M.S. Krishnan, associate professor of computer information systems at the University of Michigan Business School and a conference attendee. Krishnan says that when the now-defunct Napster shut down its file-sharing service last year, the university's Internet traffic plummeted 48%. His interpretation: There's no business model there yet, and it probably will take government intervention to make sure an equitable one is forged. Until that happens, Krishnan says, IT leaders aren't going to invest in copy-control technologies that don't offer them payback. "What they're saying is, 'I do the investment, and you make the money,'" he says. "Where is the business value?"
Security Threat Report: July 2009 Update
In 2009, cybercriminals are turning their attention to Web 2.0, social networking platforms, and alternative tools such as PDFs. This security threat report examines new malware trends, and explains how businesses can defend against them....

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